Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I told my kids that they could take their masks off on 3/1. This update agrees with that. If something changes next week, cases drop significantly or rise significantly, the CDC announces that hospitalization rates are the new metric, something else, then maybe my kids will be able to take their masks off sooner or maybe they'll have to keep them on longer. But as of right now, that's the plan for our family.
I told mine to keep his on for as long as possible, unless it become weird and he feels like he's standing out. I'm caring for an immune-compromised person right now who needs life-saving treatments that he won't be able to get if he contracts covid. So "your choice" is the kind of thing that puts the life of my loved one at risk. I hope other parents decide to be a bit less careless than you.
+1000
You guys are rightfully concerned but don’t say we’re “careless” because we don’t see the value in requiring our kids to wear cloth masks that don’t really protect anyone anyway. Kids don’t need to bear the burden of your anxiety. I’m exhausted by this.
+1 at this point it’s basically dropping an ineffective mitigation. Remember all the extra “sanitizing” and “cleaning” that everyone was doing for awhile? We didn’t need to do all that, so we stopped. I feel the same way about masks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Whatever. Unmask your kid March 1. They will be a minority.
I.e., your opinion is that minority populations should be looked down upon and ostracized for being different.
Anonymous wrote:Whatever. Unmask your kid March 1. They will be a minority.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I told my kids that they could take their masks off on 3/1. This update agrees with that. If something changes next week, cases drop significantly or rise significantly, the CDC announces that hospitalization rates are the new metric, something else, then maybe my kids will be able to take their masks off sooner or maybe they'll have to keep them on longer. But as of right now, that's the plan for our family.
I told mine to keep his on for as long as possible, unless it become weird and he feels like he's standing out. I'm caring for an immune-compromised person right now who needs life-saving treatments that he won't be able to get if he contracts covid. So "your choice" is the kind of thing that puts the life of my loved one at risk. I hope other parents decide to be a bit less careless than you.
+1000
You guys are rightfully concerned but don’t say we’re “careless” because we don’t see the value in requiring our kids to wear cloth masks that don’t really protect anyone anyway. Kids don’t need to bear the burden of your anxiety. I’m exhausted by this.
Anonymous wrote:Whatever. Unmask your kid March 1. They will be a minority.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I told my kids that they could take their masks off on 3/1. This update agrees with that. If something changes next week, cases drop significantly or rise significantly, the CDC announces that hospitalization rates are the new metric, something else, then maybe my kids will be able to take their masks off sooner or maybe they'll have to keep them on longer. But as of right now, that's the plan for our family.
I told mine to keep his on for as long as possible, unless it become weird and he feels like he's standing out. I'm caring for an immune-compromised person right now who needs life-saving treatments that he won't be able to get if he contracts covid. So "your choice" is the kind of thing that puts the life of my loved one at risk. I hope other parents decide to be a bit less careless than you.
+1000
Anonymous wrote:Whatever. Unmask your kid March 1. They will be a minority.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:“Understand their legal obligation” to me means they understand they will have to comply. But they are hopeful that by March 1 transmission continues to decrease.
+1. It’s really not hard to understand. The problem is so many here have a vendetta against FCPS that they try to make everything a conspiracy or scandal.
Yeah, it says they "understand their legal" blah blah, but then directs parents to their existing FCPS off ramp plan. In other words, it refuses to recognize the passage of VA state law. Unbelievable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:“Understand their legal obligation” to me means they understand they will have to comply. But they are hopeful that by March 1 transmission continues to decrease.
+1. It’s really not hard to understand. The problem is so many here have a vendetta against FCPS that they try to make everything a conspiracy or scandal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^^^ Of course. But why are people still complaining about this 1 March opt-out?
We're complaining about fcps and McKay resisting the March 1st date...which is very reasonable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I told my kids that they could take their masks off on 3/1. This update agrees with that. If something changes next week, cases drop significantly or rise significantly, the CDC announces that hospitalization rates are the new metric, something else, then maybe my kids will be able to take their masks off sooner or maybe they'll have to keep them on longer. But as of right now, that's the plan for our family.
I told mine to keep his on for as long as possible, unless it become weird and he feels like he's standing out. I'm caring for an immune-compromised person right now who needs life-saving treatments that he won't be able to get if he contracts covid. So "your choice" is the kind of thing that puts the life of my loved one at risk. I hope other parents decide to be a bit less careless than you.
+1000
You guys are rightfully concerned but don’t say we’re “careless” because we don’t see the value in requiring our kids to wear cloth masks that don’t really protect anyone anyway. Kids don’t need to bear the burden of your anxiety. I’m exhausted by this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I told my kids that they could take their masks off on 3/1. This update agrees with that. If something changes next week, cases drop significantly or rise significantly, the CDC announces that hospitalization rates are the new metric, something else, then maybe my kids will be able to take their masks off sooner or maybe they'll have to keep them on longer. But as of right now, that's the plan for our family.
I told mine to keep his on for as long as possible, unless it become weird and he feels like he's standing out. I'm caring for an immune-compromised person right now who needs life-saving treatments that he won't be able to get if he contracts covid. So "your choice" is the kind of thing that puts the life of my loved one at risk. I hope other parents decide to be a bit less careless than you.
+1000