Anonymous wrote:Ask a mother of a baby in day care how scared she is. Her baby is with others who have siblings in school. The risk is real and it’s not that small.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
You misunderstood. I agree with you that idiots who don’t vaccinate deserve what they get but young kids aren’t eligible and teens have old vaccines with no approved booster.
Vaccines work of course. We need to focus on mandating vaccines for those who are eligible and developing vaccines for those not yet eligible.
It seems like people without young kids feel like they don’t count. Saying everyone is vaccinated just isn’t true (sadly). Ask a mother of a baby in day care how scared she is. Her baby is with others who have siblings in school. The risk is real and it’s not that small.
16+ can get a booster. 5-11 just got vaccinated. The only ones who could have been vaccinated over 6 months ago but aren't eligible for a booster are 12-15.
Yep. And that’s a lot of kids!!! Kids who matter but just not to you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In short, they've put metrics around when an individual school may move to 14 days of virtual, but no system wide closure.
Now the health dept guys is lecturing about hand-washing.
Thank you for the summary, PP, which I really really hope is accurate!
The metrics are 5% or more unrelated cases within 14 days, or minimum of 10 in a classroom. Pretty reasonable I think.
5% is huge. My son’s school has 2200 kids so they wait until they have 110 cases confirmed before doing anything. We know lots of kids at that point are carriers and a symptomatic so the number is really higher. I bet they’ll be at the 5% after the holidays but have no idea because the reporting system is flawed.
They are basically saying that they are willing to sacrifice a certain number of lives before doing anything. It’s crazy. Our teacher shortages is about to get a lot worse too.
MCPS is acting like we live in some backward districts in Florida or Texas.
I think a threshold of 110 cases in a 2,200 student high school is completely reasonable.
The teachers should be vaccinated and boostered. Everyone aged 16+ in high school should be vaccinated and either boostered or at low risk of severe disease. Everyone aged 5-11 should have just gotten vaccinated. Everyone aged 12-15 should be vaccinated and can be boostered if at high risk. So why are you talking about "sacrificing lives"?
I believe its also over the course of 2 weeks, so it'll actually be pretty easy to hit that threshold
The metrics were manufactured to ensure the desired outcome. It's just a way for them to go virtual without saying that made the decision across the board. The thing is they cannot justify these decisions anymore. Why 5%? Why not 10%? Why not 3%? Even more so no one can tell us why this is necessary when everyone is vaxxed and boosted and at very very low risk of severe outcomes.
“Everyone” is vaccinated? Huh?
Well this kind of ignorance means nobody can take you seriously. Can’t you Google?
Another person so selfishly wrapped up in their own world. Painful.
If you are not vaccinated you do not care about your own health....so why should I? Done looking out for others that don't want to look out for themselves. Vaccines work!
You misunderstood. I agree with you that idiots who don’t vaccinate deserve what they get but young kids aren’t eligible and teens have old vaccines with no approved booster.
Vaccines work of course. We need to focus on mandating vaccines for those who are eligible and developing vaccines for those not yet eligible.
It seems like people without young kids feel like they don’t count. Saying everyone is vaccinated just isn’t true (sadly). Ask a mother of a baby in day care how scared she is. Her baby is with others who have siblings in school. The risk is real and it’s not that small.
Every school age child is eligible and has been for almost 2 months.
I actually is small. Very, very small. What you are saying essentially is you want zero risk. That will never happen.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In short, they've put metrics around when an individual school may move to 14 days of virtual, but no system wide closure.
Now the health dept guys is lecturing about hand-washing.
Thank you for the summary, PP, which I really really hope is accurate!
The metrics are 5% or more unrelated cases within 14 days, or minimum of 10 in a classroom. Pretty reasonable I think.
5% is huge. My son’s school has 2200 kids so they wait until they have 110 cases confirmed before doing anything. We know lots of kids at that point are carriers and a symptomatic so the number is really higher. I bet they’ll be at the 5% after the holidays but have no idea because the reporting system is flawed.
They are basically saying that they are willing to sacrifice a certain number of lives before doing anything. It’s crazy. Our teacher shortages is about to get a lot worse too.
MCPS is acting like we live in some backward districts in Florida or Texas.
I think a threshold of 110 cases in a 2,200 student high school is completely reasonable.
The teachers should be vaccinated and boostered. Everyone aged 16+ in high school should be vaccinated and either boostered or at low risk of severe disease. Everyone aged 5-11 should have just gotten vaccinated. Everyone aged 12-15 should be vaccinated and can be boostered if at high risk. So why are you talking about "sacrificing lives"?
I believe its also over the course of 2 weeks, so it'll actually be pretty easy to hit that threshold
The metrics were manufactured to ensure the desired outcome. It's just a way for them to go virtual without saying that made the decision across the board. The thing is they cannot justify these decisions anymore. Why 5%? Why not 10%? Why not 3%? Even more so no one can tell us why this is necessary when everyone is vaxxed and boosted and at very very low risk of severe outcomes.
“Everyone” is vaccinated? Huh?
Well this kind of ignorance means nobody can take you seriously. Can’t you Google?
Another person so selfishly wrapped up in their own world. Painful.
If you are not vaccinated you do not care about your own health....so why should I? Done looking out for others that don't want to look out for themselves. Vaccines work!
You misunderstood. I agree with you that idiots who don’t vaccinate deserve what they get but young kids aren’t eligible and teens have old vaccines with no approved booster.
Vaccines work of course. We need to focus on mandating vaccines for those who are eligible and developing vaccines for those not yet eligible.
It seems like people without young kids feel like they don’t count. Saying everyone is vaccinated just isn’t true (sadly). Ask a mother of a baby in day care how scared she is. Her baby is with others who have siblings in school. The risk is real and it’s not that small.
Every school age child is eligible and has been for almost 2 months.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In short, they've put metrics around when an individual school may move to 14 days of virtual, but no system wide closure.
Now the health dept guys is lecturing about hand-washing.
Thank you for the summary, PP, which I really really hope is accurate!
The metrics are 5% or more unrelated cases within 14 days, or minimum of 10 in a classroom. Pretty reasonable I think.
5% is huge. My son’s school has 2200 kids so they wait until they have 110 cases confirmed before doing anything. We know lots of kids at that point are carriers and a symptomatic so the number is really higher. I bet they’ll be at the 5% after the holidays but have no idea because the reporting system is flawed.
They are basically saying that they are willing to sacrifice a certain number of lives before doing anything. It’s crazy. Our teacher shortages is about to get a lot worse too.
MCPS is acting like we live in some backward districts in Florida or Texas.
I think a threshold of 110 cases in a 2,200 student high school is completely reasonable.
The teachers should be vaccinated and boostered. Everyone aged 16+ in high school should be vaccinated and either boostered or at low risk of severe disease. Everyone aged 5-11 should have just gotten vaccinated. Everyone aged 12-15 should be vaccinated and can be boostered if at high risk. So why are you talking about "sacrificing lives"?
I believe its also over the course of 2 weeks, so it'll actually be pretty easy to hit that threshold
The metrics were manufactured to ensure the desired outcome. It's just a way for them to go virtual without saying that made the decision across the board. The thing is they cannot justify these decisions anymore. Why 5%? Why not 10%? Why not 3%? Even more so no one can tell us why this is necessary when everyone is vaxxed and boosted and at very very low risk of severe outcomes.
“Everyone” is vaccinated? Huh?
Well this kind of ignorance means nobody can take you seriously. Can’t you Google?
Another person so selfishly wrapped up in their own world. Painful.
If you are not vaccinated you do not care about your own health....so why should I? Done looking out for others that don't want to look out for themselves. Vaccines work!
You misunderstood. I agree with you that idiots who don’t vaccinate deserve what they get but young kids aren’t eligible and teens have old vaccines with no approved booster.
Vaccines work of course. We need to focus on mandating vaccines for those who are eligible and developing vaccines for those not yet eligible.
It seems like people without young kids feel like they don’t count. Saying everyone is vaccinated just isn’t true (sadly). Ask a mother of a baby in day care how scared she is. Her baby is with others who have siblings in school. The risk is real and it’s not that small.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
You misunderstood. I agree with you that idiots who don’t vaccinate deserve what they get but young kids aren’t eligible and teens have old vaccines with no approved booster.
Vaccines work of course. We need to focus on mandating vaccines for those who are eligible and developing vaccines for those not yet eligible.
It seems like people without young kids feel like they don’t count. Saying everyone is vaccinated just isn’t true (sadly). Ask a mother of a baby in day care how scared she is. Her baby is with others who have siblings in school. The risk is real and it’s not that small.
16+ can get a booster. 5-11 just got vaccinated. The only ones who could have been vaccinated over 6 months ago but aren't eligible for a booster are 12-15.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In short, they've put metrics around when an individual school may move to 14 days of virtual, but no system wide closure.
Now the health dept guys is lecturing about hand-washing.
Thank you for the summary, PP, which I really really hope is accurate!
The metrics are 5% or more unrelated cases within 14 days, or minimum of 10 in a classroom. Pretty reasonable I think.
5% is huge. My son’s school has 2200 kids so they wait until they have 110 cases confirmed before doing anything. We know lots of kids at that point are carriers and a symptomatic so the number is really higher. I bet they’ll be at the 5% after the holidays but have no idea because the reporting system is flawed.
They are basically saying that they are willing to sacrifice a certain number of lives before doing anything. It’s crazy. Our teacher shortages is about to get a lot worse too.
MCPS is acting like we live in some backward districts in Florida or Texas.
I think a threshold of 110 cases in a 2,200 student high school is completely reasonable.
The teachers should be vaccinated and boostered. Everyone aged 16+ in high school should be vaccinated and either boostered or at low risk of severe disease. Everyone aged 5-11 should have just gotten vaccinated. Everyone aged 12-15 should be vaccinated and can be boostered if at high risk. So why are you talking about "sacrificing lives"?
I’m talking about “sacrificing lives” because I know healthy people who have died from Covid, people who have been sick for over a year because of Covid and fully vaccinated teens who got Covid who didn’t recover.
You think it can’t happen to you and don’t care if it happens to others. Don’t pretend vaccinated people aren’t at risk and don’t overlook that not everyone can be vaccinated. How do you not know this? I have a 4 year old who has medical issues. My vaccinated but not boosted high schooler is worried about infecting his brother. What do I say to him? Someone on DCUbanmom said not to worry?
No. He’s home now because his anxiety over bringing Covid home was overwhelming. And MCPS ignores this because selfish people scream the loudest.
You seem to know an unusual number of extreme statistical outliers. I can see why your son has anxiety.
I think she also knows Patient Zero in Wuhan...
Anonymous wrote:
You misunderstood. I agree with you that idiots who don’t vaccinate deserve what they get but young kids aren’t eligible and teens have old vaccines with no approved booster.
Vaccines work of course. We need to focus on mandating vaccines for those who are eligible and developing vaccines for those not yet eligible.
It seems like people without young kids feel like they don’t count. Saying everyone is vaccinated just isn’t true (sadly). Ask a mother of a baby in day care how scared she is. Her baby is with others who have siblings in school. The risk is real and it’s not that small.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In short, they've put metrics around when an individual school may move to 14 days of virtual, but no system wide closure.
Now the health dept guys is lecturing about hand-washing.
Thank you for the summary, PP, which I really really hope is accurate!
The metrics are 5% or more unrelated cases within 14 days, or minimum of 10 in a classroom. Pretty reasonable I think.
5% is huge. My son’s school has 2200 kids so they wait until they have 110 cases confirmed before doing anything. We know lots of kids at that point are carriers and a symptomatic so the number is really higher. I bet they’ll be at the 5% after the holidays but have no idea because the reporting system is flawed.
They are basically saying that they are willing to sacrifice a certain number of lives before doing anything. It’s crazy. Our teacher shortages is about to get a lot worse too.
MCPS is acting like we live in some backward districts in Florida or Texas.
I think a threshold of 110 cases in a 2,200 student high school is completely reasonable.
The teachers should be vaccinated and boostered. Everyone aged 16+ in high school should be vaccinated and either boostered or at low risk of severe disease. Everyone aged 5-11 should have just gotten vaccinated. Everyone aged 12-15 should be vaccinated and can be boostered if at high risk. So why are you talking about "sacrificing lives"?
I believe its also over the course of 2 weeks, so it'll actually be pretty easy to hit that threshold
The metrics were manufactured to ensure the desired outcome. It's just a way for them to go virtual without saying that made the decision across the board. The thing is they cannot justify these decisions anymore. Why 5%? Why not 10%? Why not 3%? Even more so no one can tell us why this is necessary when everyone is vaxxed and boosted and at very very low risk of severe outcomes.
“Everyone” is vaccinated? Huh?
Well this kind of ignorance means nobody can take you seriously. Can’t you Google?
Another person so selfishly wrapped up in their own world. Painful.
If you are not vaccinated you do not care about your own health....so why should I? Done looking out for others that don't want to look out for themselves. Vaccines work!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In short, they've put metrics around when an individual school may move to 14 days of virtual, but no system wide closure.
Now the health dept guys is lecturing about hand-washing.
Thank you for the summary, PP, which I really really hope is accurate!
The metrics are 5% or more unrelated cases within 14 days, or minimum of 10 in a classroom. Pretty reasonable I think.
5% is huge. My son’s school has 2200 kids so they wait until they have 110 cases confirmed before doing anything. We know lots of kids at that point are carriers and a symptomatic so the number is really higher. I bet they’ll be at the 5% after the holidays but have no idea because the reporting system is flawed.
They are basically saying that they are willing to sacrifice a certain number of lives before doing anything. It’s crazy. Our teacher shortages is about to get a lot worse too.
MCPS is acting like we live in some backward districts in Florida or Texas.
I think a threshold of 110 cases in a 2,200 student high school is completely reasonable.
The teachers should be vaccinated and boostered. Everyone aged 16+ in high school should be vaccinated and either boostered or at low risk of severe disease. Everyone aged 5-11 should have just gotten vaccinated. Everyone aged 12-15 should be vaccinated and can be boostered if at high risk. So why are you talking about "sacrificing lives"?
I’m talking about “sacrificing lives” because I know healthy people who have died from Covid, people who have been sick for over a year because of Covid and fully vaccinated teens who got Covid who didn’t recover.
You think it can’t happen to you and don’t care if it happens to others. Don’t pretend vaccinated people aren’t at risk and don’t overlook that not everyone can be vaccinated. How do you not know this? I have a 4 year old who has medical issues. My vaccinated but not boosted high schooler is worried about infecting his brother. What do I say to him? Someone on DCUbanmom said not to worry?
No. He’s home now because his anxiety over bringing Covid home was overwhelming. And MCPS ignores this because selfish people scream the loudest.
You seem to know an unusual number of extreme statistical outliers. I can see why your son has anxiety.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In short, they've put metrics around when an individual school may move to 14 days of virtual, but no system wide closure.
Now the health dept guys is lecturing about hand-washing.
Thank you for the summary, PP, which I really really hope is accurate!
The metrics are 5% or more unrelated cases within 14 days, or minimum of 10 in a classroom. Pretty reasonable I think.
5% is huge. My son’s school has 2200 kids so they wait until they have 110 cases confirmed before doing anything. We know lots of kids at that point are carriers and a symptomatic so the number is really higher. I bet they’ll be at the 5% after the holidays but have no idea because the reporting system is flawed.
They are basically saying that they are willing to sacrifice a certain number of lives before doing anything. It’s crazy. Our teacher shortages is about to get a lot worse too.
MCPS is acting like we live in some backward districts in Florida or Texas.
I think a threshold of 110 cases in a 2,200 student high school is completely reasonable.
The teachers should be vaccinated and boostered. Everyone aged 16+ in high school should be vaccinated and either boostered or at low risk of severe disease. Everyone aged 5-11 should have just gotten vaccinated. Everyone aged 12-15 should be vaccinated and can be boostered if at high risk. So why are you talking about "sacrificing lives"?
I’m talking about “sacrificing lives” because I know healthy people who have died from Covid, people who have been sick for over a year because of Covid and fully vaccinated teens who got Covid who didn’t recover.
You think it can’t happen to you and don’t care if it happens to others. Don’t pretend vaccinated people aren’t at risk and don’t overlook that not everyone can be vaccinated. How do you not know this? I have a 4 year old who has medical issues. My vaccinated but not boosted high schooler is worried about infecting his brother. What do I say to him? Someone on DCUbanmom said not to worry?
No. He’s home now because his anxiety over bringing Covid home was overwhelming. And MCPS ignores this because selfish people scream the loudest.
You seem to know an unusual number of extreme statistical outliers. I can see why your son has anxiety.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In short, they've put metrics around when an individual school may move to 14 days of virtual, but no system wide closure.
Now the health dept guys is lecturing about hand-washing.
Thank you for the summary, PP, which I really really hope is accurate!
The metrics are 5% or more unrelated cases within 14 days, or minimum of 10 in a classroom. Pretty reasonable I think.
5% is huge. My son’s school has 2200 kids so they wait until they have 110 cases confirmed before doing anything. We know lots of kids at that point are carriers and a symptomatic so the number is really higher. I bet they’ll be at the 5% after the holidays but have no idea because the reporting system is flawed.
They are basically saying that they are willing to sacrifice a certain number of lives before doing anything. It’s crazy. Our teacher shortages is about to get a lot worse too.
MCPS is acting like we live in some backward districts in Florida or Texas.
I think a threshold of 110 cases in a 2,200 student high school is completely reasonable.
The teachers should be vaccinated and boostered. Everyone aged 16+ in high school should be vaccinated and either boostered or at low risk of severe disease. Everyone aged 5-11 should have just gotten vaccinated. Everyone aged 12-15 should be vaccinated and can be boostered if at high risk. So why are you talking about "sacrificing lives"?
I believe its also over the course of 2 weeks, so it'll actually be pretty easy to hit that threshold
The metrics were manufactured to ensure the desired outcome. It's just a way for them to go virtual without saying that made the decision across the board. The thing is they cannot justify these decisions anymore. Why 5%? Why not 10%? Why not 3%? Even more so no one can tell us why this is necessary when everyone is vaxxed and boosted and at very very low risk of severe outcomes.
“Everyone” is vaccinated? Huh?
Well this kind of ignorance means nobody can take you seriously. Can’t you Google?
Another person so selfishly wrapped up in their own world. Painful.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In short, they've put metrics around when an individual school may move to 14 days of virtual, but no system wide closure.
Now the health dept guys is lecturing about hand-washing.
Thank you for the summary, PP, which I really really hope is accurate!
The metrics are 5% or more unrelated cases within 14 days, or minimum of 10 in a classroom. Pretty reasonable I think.
5% is huge. My son’s school has 2200 kids so they wait until they have 110 cases confirmed before doing anything. We know lots of kids at that point are carriers and a symptomatic so the number is really higher. I bet they’ll be at the 5% after the holidays but have no idea because the reporting system is flawed.
They are basically saying that they are willing to sacrifice a certain number of lives before doing anything. It’s crazy. Our teacher shortages is about to get a lot worse too.
MCPS is acting like we live in some backward districts in Florida or Texas.
I think a threshold of 110 cases in a 2,200 student high school is completely reasonable.
The teachers should be vaccinated and boostered. Everyone aged 16+ in high school should be vaccinated and either boostered or at low risk of severe disease. Everyone aged 5-11 should have just gotten vaccinated. Everyone aged 12-15 should be vaccinated and can be boostered if at high risk. So why are you talking about "sacrificing lives"?
I’m talking about “sacrificing lives” because I know healthy people who have died from Covid, people who have been sick for over a year because of Covid and fully vaccinated teens who got Covid who didn’t recover.
You think it can’t happen to you and don’t care if it happens to others. Don’t pretend vaccinated people aren’t at risk and don’t overlook that not everyone can be vaccinated. How do you not know this? I have a 4 year old who has medical issues. My vaccinated but not boosted high schooler is worried about infecting his brother. What do I say to him? Someone on DCUbanmom said not to worry?
No. He’s home now because his anxiety over bringing Covid home was overwhelming. And MCPS ignores this because selfish people scream the loudest.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In short, they've put metrics around when an individual school may move to 14 days of virtual, but no system wide closure.
Now the health dept guys is lecturing about hand-washing.
Thank you for the summary, PP, which I really really hope is accurate!
The metrics are 5% or more unrelated cases within 14 days, or minimum of 10 in a classroom. Pretty reasonable I think.
5% is huge. My son’s school has 2200 kids so they wait until they have 110 cases confirmed before doing anything. We know lots of kids at that point are carriers and a symptomatic so the number is really higher. I bet they’ll be at the 5% after the holidays but have no idea because the reporting system is flawed.
They are basically saying that they are willing to sacrifice a certain number of lives before doing anything. It’s crazy. Our teacher shortages is about to get a lot worse too.
MCPS is acting like we live in some backward districts in Florida or Texas.
Sacrifice lives? Everyone at risk of anything even remotely serious should be vaccinated and boosted. No excuses at this point. The rate of hospitalization for people under 65 who are fully vaxxed is extremely low. The rate of death for the fully vaxxed is virtually nil. You need to be clinically neurotic and/or innumerate to be so scared of this that you are willing to shut down schools again. And if you really are that concerned, it's probably best you home school your kids, which is always an option.
This. This is why people are angry and frustrated. We all just got our kids vaccinated and boosted ourselves and took a deep breath. It seems MCPS is just looking for ways for schools to go virtual. Posters will say but it's the virus. No, really, it's our policies. The data clearly bear out this virus is not a major threat to vaccinated children and adults. Where does it end? At some point we really do have to stop using cases as a metric. The thought of having school closures looming for the duration of my children's education is really defeating.
It is a pandemic. There is a new variant. Vaccines were not made for this variant. You are defeated. The rest of us will keep our families safe and emerge strong with resilient children who have learned how to cope and survive adversity.
Pfizer just released a study showing even the two dose regime, and especially the booster, remain effective against the new variant. Fauci has been citing it on the news. I know that does not fit with your narrative. Also, the pandemic and school closures have been especially hard on working families and front line workers, but I would not expect you to understand that. Not everyone is a SAH or works at a BS Zoom job and can stay home and bake muffins during virtual learning.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In short, they've put metrics around when an individual school may move to 14 days of virtual, but no system wide closure.
Now the health dept guys is lecturing about hand-washing.
Thank you for the summary, PP, which I really really hope is accurate!
The metrics are 5% or more unrelated cases within 14 days, or minimum of 10 in a classroom. Pretty reasonable I think.
5% is huge. My son’s school has 2200 kids so they wait until they have 110 cases confirmed before doing anything. We know lots of kids at that point are carriers and a symptomatic so the number is really higher. I bet they’ll be at the 5% after the holidays but have no idea because the reporting system is flawed.
They are basically saying that they are willing to sacrifice a certain number of lives before doing anything. It’s crazy. Our teacher shortages is about to get a lot worse too.
MCPS is acting like we live in some backward districts in Florida or Texas.
I think a threshold of 110 cases in a 2,200 student high school is completely reasonable.
The teachers should be vaccinated and boostered. Everyone aged 16+ in high school should be vaccinated and either boostered or at low risk of severe disease. Everyone aged 5-11 should have just gotten vaccinated. Everyone aged 12-15 should be vaccinated and can be boostered if at high risk. So why are you talking about "sacrificing lives"?
I’m talking about “sacrificing lives” because I know healthy people who have died from Covid, people who have been sick for over a year because of Covid and fully vaccinated teens who got Covid who didn’t recover.
You think it can’t happen to you and don’t care if it happens to others. Don’t pretend vaccinated people aren’t at risk and don’t overlook that not everyone can be vaccinated. How do you not know this? I have a 4 year old who has medical issues. My vaccinated but not boosted high schooler is worried about infecting his brother. What do I say to him? Someone on DCUbanmom said not to worry?
No. He’s home now because his anxiety over bringing Covid home was overwhelming. And MCPS ignores this because selfish people scream the loudest.