Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There was one outbreak at an Alexandria daycare. The center wan’r being smart (had a floater going between classrooms, and other inadvisable practices) and they had at least four teachers and multiple students test positive. If they had been keeping everyone in a pod they wouldn’t have gotten shut down because it wouldn’t have spread across the school.
Do you know which one?
Yup, but I’m not going to name names because the health department is involved now, so I assume that they will step up their game. No need to publicly shame them. I just wanted it to be clear that outbreaks can and have happened.
And I am the poster from right above. I wish that the health departments would/could take a more active role in advising centers what the best practices are. My understanding is that the health department doesn’t step in until there is an outbreak, which is ridiculous.
Maybe not but best practices aren’t rocket science. We all know pretty well now what to do. Small group sizes. No mixing between the groups. Masks. Lots of hand washing. As much outside time as possible. Good ventilation inside. Temp checks at drop off. No parents inside the facility. Etc. But some of the daycares haven’t even implemented masks and small group sizes, so they need to start there.
Ours is doing an OK job but just OK. They talk a better talk than they actually do. In the policy masks are stated to be encouraged but they aren't encouraging them so because of that only a small number of parents teach their kids to wear them (it really isn't that hard) and unless the parents say they want their kids to always wear them they let the kids take them off. Also, they aren't practicing social distancing during circle time or on the playground. It also seems like they are mixing classes some or at least teachers. Sigh....
Ours is the same. We're probably exposed to 50 families.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There was one outbreak at an Alexandria daycare. The center wan’r being smart (had a floater going between classrooms, and other inadvisable practices) and they had at least four teachers and multiple students test positive. If they had been keeping everyone in a pod they wouldn’t have gotten shut down because it wouldn’t have spread across the school.
Do you know which one?
Yup, but I’m not going to name names because the health department is involved now, so I assume that they will step up their game. No need to publicly shame them. I just wanted it to be clear that outbreaks can and have happened.
And I am the poster from right above. I wish that the health departments would/could take a more active role in advising centers what the best practices are. My understanding is that the health department doesn’t step in until there is an outbreak, which is ridiculous.
Maybe not but best practices aren’t rocket science. We all know pretty well now what to do. Small group sizes. No mixing between the groups. Masks. Lots of hand washing. As much outside time as possible. Good ventilation inside. Temp checks at drop off. No parents inside the facility. Etc. But some of the daycares haven’t even implemented masks and small group sizes, so they need to start there.
Ours is doing an OK job but just OK. They talk a better talk than they actually do. In the policy masks are stated to be encouraged but they aren't encouraging them so because of that only a small number of parents teach their kids to wear them (it really isn't that hard) and unless the parents say they want their kids to always wear them they let the kids take them off. Also, they aren't practicing social distancing during circle time or on the playground. It also seems like they are mixing classes some or at least teachers. Sigh....
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There was one outbreak at an Alexandria daycare. The center wan’r being smart (had a floater going between classrooms, and other inadvisable practices) and they had at least four teachers and multiple students test positive. If they had been keeping everyone in a pod they wouldn’t have gotten shut down because it wouldn’t have spread across the school.
Do you know which one?
Yup, but I’m not going to name names because the health department is involved now, so I assume that they will step up their game. No need to publicly shame them. I just wanted it to be clear that outbreaks can and have happened.
And I am the poster from right above. I wish that the health departments would/could take a more active role in advising centers what the best practices are. My understanding is that the health department doesn’t step in until there is an outbreak, which is ridiculous.
Maybe not but best practices aren’t rocket science. We all know pretty well now what to do. Small group sizes. No mixing between the groups. Masks. Lots of hand washing. As much outside time as possible. Good ventilation inside. Temp checks at drop off. No parents inside the facility. Etc. But some of the daycares haven’t even implemented masks and small group sizes, so they need to start there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There was one outbreak at an Alexandria daycare. The center wan’r being smart (had a floater going between classrooms, and other inadvisable practices) and they had at least four teachers and multiple students test positive. If they had been keeping everyone in a pod they wouldn’t have gotten shut down because it wouldn’t have spread across the school.
Do you know which one?
Yup, but I’m not going to name names because the health department is involved now, so I assume that they will step up their game. No need to publicly shame them. I just wanted it to be clear that outbreaks can and have happened.
And I am the poster from right above. I wish that the health departments would/could take a more active role in advising centers what the best practices are. My understanding is that the health department doesn’t step in until there is an outbreak, which is ridiculous.
Maybe not but best practices aren’t rocket science. We all know pretty well now what to do. Small group sizes. No mixing between the groups. Masks. Lots of hand washing. As much outside time as possible. Good ventilation inside. Temp checks at drop off. No parents inside the facility. Etc. But some of the daycares haven’t even implemented masks and small group sizes, so they need to start there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There was one outbreak at an Alexandria daycare. The center wan’r being smart (had a floater going between classrooms, and other inadvisable practices) and they had at least four teachers and multiple students test positive. If they had been keeping everyone in a pod they wouldn’t have gotten shut down because it wouldn’t have spread across the school.
Do you know which one?
Yup, but I’m not going to name names because the health department is involved now, so I assume that they will step up their game. No need to publicly shame them. I just wanted it to be clear that outbreaks can and have happened.
And I am the poster from right above. I wish that the health departments would/could take a more active role in advising centers what the best practices are. My understanding is that the health department doesn’t step in until there is an outbreak, which is ridiculous.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There was one outbreak at an Alexandria daycare. The center wan’r being smart (had a floater going between classrooms, and other inadvisable practices) and they had at least four teachers and multiple students test positive. If they had been keeping everyone in a pod they wouldn’t have gotten shut down because it wouldn’t have spread across the school.
Do you know which one?
Yup, but I’m not going to name names because the health department is involved now, so I assume that they will step up their game. No need to publicly shame them. I just wanted it to be clear that outbreaks can and have happened.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There was one outbreak at an Alexandria daycare. The center wan’r being smart (had a floater going between classrooms, and other inadvisable practices) and they had at least four teachers and multiple students test positive. If they had been keeping everyone in a pod they wouldn’t have gotten shut down because it wouldn’t have spread across the school.
Do you know which one?
Anonymous wrote:There was one outbreak at an Alexandria daycare. The center wan’r being smart (had a floater going between classrooms, and other inadvisable practices) and they had at least four teachers and multiple students test positive. If they had been keeping everyone in a pod they wouldn’t have gotten shut down because it wouldn’t have spread across the school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP just stop it. Yes, there have been sporadic cases at preschools. No there have not been outbreaks in this area.
Remember when we all agreed to flatten the curve? Now, if you have 1 case somewhere, someone says “CLOSE IT ALL DOWN!!!!”
Sure. Let the economy die right? Shut up
Anonymous wrote:OP just stop it. Yes, there have been sporadic cases at preschools. No there have not been outbreaks in this area.
Remember when we all agreed to flatten the curve? Now, if you have 1 case somewhere, someone says “CLOSE IT ALL DOWN!!!!”