Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OMG enough with the schools. We know you don't want to watch your kids -- too bad.
Construction workers are not packed into a 12-foot room with 25 other students for 8 hour days.
They are outside, spread out, often the solo person manning heavy machinery.
Its actually safer to be on a construction crew breathing fresh air than the recycled air classrooms with 3,000 coughing students in the same building.
+1000 Jesus Christ, people. We’re sorry that you had kids you can’t deal with being around 24 hours a day, but we’re not going to send little Petri dishes to school just so you can get a break from them and then unleash them on to the rest of society. We all know half of you aren’t keeping your kids quarantined anyways and the other half would sue the school system and government to kingdom come if your kid got it at school anyways so there’s no point. I cannot believe the selfishness of the parents that continue to spout on about schools and pools reopening despite common sense.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The political reality is that once businesses start opening back up, the pressure on schools to reopen as well will become inexorable.
We're not going to be in a place where all the stores are open but the schools remain closed. That just isn't going to happen.
+1
Stores are totally different from schools. You can go in and out of stores, on your own schedule, and they can enforce very good distancing and hygeine practices. Less so re-opening a school
Anonymous wrote:The reason everything closed was so that everyone doesn't get sick at the same time and overwhelm the hospital system.
It's not that everything is supposed to remain closed, and everyone works from home, until a vaccine is available for everyone.
Anonymous wrote:DC to phase 1 on Friday
https://wtop.com/coronavirus/2020/05/dc-coronavirus-update-may-27/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The political reality is that once businesses start opening back up, the pressure on schools to reopen as well will become inexorable.
We're not going to be in a place where all the stores are open but the schools remain closed. That just isn't going to happen.
+1
Stores are totally different from schools. You can go in and out of stores, on your own schedule, and they can enforce very good distancing and hygeine practices. Less so re-opening a school
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The political reality is that once businesses start opening back up, the pressure on schools to reopen as well will become inexorable.
We're not going to be in a place where all the stores are open but the schools remain closed. That just isn't going to happen.
+1
Anonymous wrote:The political reality is that once businesses start opening back up, the pressure on schools to reopen as well will become inexorable.
We're not going to be in a place where all the stores are open but the schools remain closed. That just isn't going to happen.
Anonymous wrote:I was wondering to myself whether the DC government actually wants parents of young children to leave for other states that do open schools. It will probably cost DC more to educate my two kids annually than we pay in taxes, so if we leave now after living here for more than a decade, DC wins (looking only at a balance sheet, which doesn't value things like community).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The political reality is that once businesses start opening back up, the pressure on schools to reopen as well will become inexorable.
We're not going to be in a place where all the stores are open but the schools remain closed. That just isn't going to happen.
I think that's right. I think the pressure will be even more intense if a place like NYC reopens--which is very much possible even Cuomo's reluctance to close them to begin with.
Definitely. Bowser follows what other people do. If you want to know the future, look at what Cuomo does or what Mike DeWine does in Ohio. Ohio has been way, way, way ahead of the curve on all this stuff.
Which curve has Ohio been ahead of?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The political reality is that once businesses start opening back up, the pressure on schools to reopen as well will become inexorable.
We're not going to be in a place where all the stores are open but the schools remain closed. That just isn't going to happen.
I think that's right. I think the pressure will be even more intense if a place like NYC reopens--which is very much possible even Cuomo's reluctance to close them to begin with.
Definitely. Bowser follows what other people do. If you want to know the future, look at what Cuomo does or what Mike DeWine does in Ohio. Ohio has been way, way, way ahead of the curve on all this stuff.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The political reality is that once businesses start opening back up, the pressure on schools to reopen as well will become inexorable.
We're not going to be in a place where all the stores are open but the schools remain closed. That just isn't going to happen.
I think that's right. I think the pressure will be even more intense if a place like NYC reopens--which is very much possible even Cuomo's reluctance to close them to begin with.