Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well. I'm impressed with the mayor's response.
I'm really pleased too, especially with test-to-return, rapid antigen tests readily available and expanded PCR test-at-home kits.
Yes. I also noticed how they kept emphasizing the safest place for kids is in school. All those posters freaking out about school closures are crazy.
It’s almost as if you were ignoring the part where us school closure folks have been advocating to close early this week because of the active public health emergency in schools, and test to return in January. It’s almost as if you just operate from knee-jerk reactions.
Yep. As a teacher who tested + today really glad we kept schools open as things spiked and I now get to spend the holidays in quarantine.
I'm truly sorry that you tested positive, but this is likely just life going forward. We can't keep shutting down schools particularly with vaccines having widespread availability. Assuming you are vaxxed you should be fine (and don't need to quarantine though I understand you may want to).
Anonymous wrote:
I'm truly sorry that you tested positive, but this is likely just life going forward. We can't keep shutting down schools particularly with vaccines having widespread availability. Assuming you are vaxxed you should be fine (and don't need to quarantine though I understand you may want to).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If the test isn't required to return, this is just wasted time off.
Testing is not required.
So the people who behave responsibly and are less likely to have and spread COVID will test. And the people who behave irresponsibly and are more likely to have and spread COVID will not test.
I just didn't understand why they don't make it mandatory.
Anonymous wrote:Was this the mayor's way of distracting from the Holocaust incident?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well. I'm impressed with the mayor's response.
I'm really pleased too, especially with test-to-return, rapid antigen tests readily available and expanded PCR test-at-home kits.
Yes. I also noticed how they kept emphasizing the safest place for kids is in school. All those posters freaking out about school closures are crazy.
It’s almost as if you were ignoring the part where us school closure folks have been advocating to close early this week because of the active public health emergency in schools, and test to return in January. It’s almost as if you just operate from knee-jerk reactions.
Yep. As a teacher who tested + today really glad we kept schools open as things spiked and I now get to spend the holidays in quarantine.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I love the idea of test to stay … finally my unvaccinated children can continue going to school. Bravo CDC !!!
This also is not test to stay
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What are the logistics of test to return? Assuming testing is mandatory- are the tests returned to the school?
It’s not test to return.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I love the idea of test to stay … finally my unvaccinated children can continue going to school. Bravo CDC !!!
This isn't test to stay....
They are trying to implement test to stay. Details not released yet. CDC just made that recommendation like 4 days ago.
Anonymous wrote:If the test isn't required to return, this is just wasted time off.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I love the idea of test to stay … finally my unvaccinated children can continue going to school. Bravo CDC !!!
This isn't test to stay....
Anonymous wrote:I love the idea of test to stay … finally my unvaccinated children can continue going to school. Bravo CDC !!!