School Closures Due To COVID Outbreaks

PoliTalker

Diversity Makes Greatness
This covers way too much material to try to list them all in the OP, so let's just post the examples as they come in.

Enjoy the discussion; and remember: We're all on the same side, and we have lots in common.

-All humans are on the same side in the war on COVID.

-We all love our kids and want them to be healthy and safe.

-We all want out kids to grow up and have it at least as good as we do.

-We all want America to be a great place for our kids to enjoy when they grow up.

-We all understand our kids need a good education.

-None of us like it that we are stricken with a pandemic.

-We all want to have our normal non-pandemic lives back.

-None of us like to see our friends, neighbors and relatives being stricken with this disease, struggling with COVID, or dying of it.

-We would all like to have it just gone.

-We all want America to enjoy as much freedom as possible while still being a civil society.

-We all love America and none of us are trying to destroy our own home country.

Now. Let's talk about those schools having to close because of COVID outbreaks.
 
COVID outbreak forces Coast elementary school to close for 14 days. Class began last week.

"Aug. 11—South Hancock Elementary School is closed for 14 days due to a COVID-19 outbreak, school officials announced Tuesday night.

The district shared the information with parents in a callout. A transcription of the call was shared with the Sun Herald.

"Teachers and staff will be working diligently tomorrow to prepare for learning to continue while students are at home," public relations administrator Joan Seals said on the call. "We will be back in touch tomorrow with more information."

District officials were not immediately available Wednesday morning to comment.

The Hancock School District started the school year on Aug. 3. Six full school days passed before the district closed South Hancock."

(Mississippi)
 
Second South Mississippi School Closes - Stone High closes doors for 2 weeks due to COVID outbreak

"Another South Mississippi school is closing its doors for two weeks due to an outbreak of COVID-19.

Stone High School announced early Wednesday afternoon that it would be closing early and will remain closed through Aug. 26.

During that time, students will transition to virtual classes and log on each day from 7:50am to 2:50pm for live instruction. Attendance will be taken daily, and grab-and-go meals for breakfast and lunch will be provided. All other schools will remain on their normal schedule."
 
COVID-19 outbreak at an Elkhorn elementary school shuts down summer program

"OMAHA, Neb. (WOWT) - A COVID-19 outbreak has shut down a summer program at an elementary school in Elkhorn. The news comes as the majority of school districts across the metro refuse to require masks despite recommendations from health experts.

Elkhorn Public Schools Foundation confirmed Wednesday it closed its Kids Campus at Fire Ridge last week because of COVID-19 cases.

A statement sent to 6 News reads in part, “following guidance from the Douglas County Health Department, the Elkhorn Public Schools Foundation closed the Fire Ridge EKC site early due to positive COVID cases.”

Officials are not specifying how many cases, but in a letter sent to parents, obtained by 6 News they point to at least two students testing positive.

And, news of an outbreak has parents across the school district worried.

“As an Elkhorn parent of young child entering school for the first time of course it giving me some anxiety for her safety and the safety of other children,” said Stephanie Bradley, noting her five-year-old daughter is too young for a COVID vaccine, but not too young to put on a mask.

“I’m imploring our superintendent. I’m imploring our school board to require masking for children at least between the ages of kindergarten to 6th grade,” said Bradley."
 
Some of us are so certain that Infowars, Qanon and Breitbart are correct, so they feel confident in risking elimination of safety practices.
 
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Hello Nordberg,

Some of us are so certain that Infowars, Qanon and Breitbart are correct, so they feel confident in risking elimination of safety practices.

I thought of beginning a thread called:

OK, Who Here Thinks Tucker Carlson Is A News Anchor?
 
5th graders at metro elementary school sent home after COVID-19 outbreak

" MARIETTA, Ga. — As COVID-19 cases continue to rise across Cobb County, an entire grade level at one elementary school has had to be sent home.

The principal at East Side Elementary School in Marietta, Maria Taylor, says she had no other choice than to send the 5th graders home because so many had tested positive for the virus, she told parents in a letter.

East Side Elementary parent Kelly Porter was not surprised to hear the news.

“I knew there had been several outbreaks in the school,” she told Parents of all 5th graders were asked to pick their kids up in a 30-minute window Wednesday morning. "
 
Polk County elementary school closes due to COVID-19 outbreak

"POLK COUNTY, Fla. — With just days to go until the first day of school in Polk County, an elementary school is closing its doors due to an outbreak of COVID-19.

There are "multiple positive cases of COVID-19 impacting the school," Spessard L. Holland Elementary stated in a Facebook post. "Polk County Public Schools is working closely with the Florida Department of Health."

The district later confirmed to Spectrum News that eight staff members have tested positive, and results for others are pending.

Just last week, the school posted a picture of a room packed with staff members at a luncheon.

"Ultimately, our priority must be the safety of our students, staff and employees," the statement read. "
 
COVID outbreak forces Coast elementary school to close for 14 days. Class began last week.

"Aug. 11—South Hancock Elementary School is closed for 14 days due to a COVID-19 outbreak, school officials announced Tuesday night.

The district shared the information with parents in a callout. A transcription of the call was shared with the Sun Herald.

"Teachers and staff will be working diligently tomorrow to prepare for learning to continue while students are at home," public relations administrator Joan Seals said on the call. "We will be back in touch tomorrow with more information."

District officials were not immediately available Wednesday morning to comment.

The Hancock School District started the school year on Aug. 3. Six full school days passed before the district closed South Hancock."

(Mississippi)

What would the snow plow man equivalent be?

RLuMLLg.gif
 
This one is gutting it out:

COVID-19 outbreak increases to 32 cases at Hamilton High School in Chandler

" CHANDLER, Ariz. — Hamilton High School in Chandler reported there are 32 active COVID-19 cases among its staff and students on Tuesday, according to the Chandler Unified School District's COVID-19 dashboard.

The new amount of cases is three times higher than the next highest amount of COVID-19 cases in the district. Chandler High School is at 10 cases.

“The cases are random and not affiliated with a particular program in a school with 4,258 students and staff," said Community Relations Director for Chandler Unified School District Terry Locke.

The most recent report is a spike from the two cases reported Monday by the school- enough to be considered an outbreak according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Locke said on Monday the school hit the threshold of two or more confirmed COVID-19 cases among students and staff from separate households, with onset within 14 days in a single classroom or core group.

He said the district plans to update its protocols on Tuesday afternoon.

It's unclear what impact the outbreak will have on in-person learning, and on activities before and after school. "
 
This covers way too much material to try to list them all in the OP, so let's just post the examples as they come in.

Enjoy the discussion; and remember: We're all on the same side, and we have lots in common.

-All humans are on the same side in the war on COVID.

-We all love our kids and want them to be healthy and safe.

-We all want out kids to grow up and have it at least as good as we do.

-We all want America to be a great place for our kids to enjoy when they grow up.

-We all understand our kids need a good education.

-None of us like it that we are stricken with a pandemic.

-We all want to have our normal non-pandemic lives back.

-None of us like to see our friends, neighbors and relatives being stricken with this disease, struggling with COVID, or dying of it.

-We would all like to have it just gone.

-We all want America to enjoy as much freedom as possible while still being a civil society.

-We all love America and none of us are trying to destroy our own home country.

Now. Let's talk about those schools having to close because of COVID outbreaks.

Repukes are doing such a great job at living it up on the taxpayer dime at defending the well being of society. Not!
 
This covers way too much material to try to list them all in the OP, so let's just post the examples as they come in.

Enjoy the discussion; and remember: We're all on the same side, and we have lots in common.

-All humans are on the same side in the war on COVID.

-We all love our kids and want them to be healthy and safe.

-We all want out kids to grow up and have it at least as good as we do.

-We all want America to be a great place for our kids to enjoy when they grow up.

-We all understand our kids need a good education.

-None of us like it that we are stricken with a pandemic.

-We all want to have our normal non-pandemic lives back.

-None of us like to see our friends, neighbors and relatives being stricken with this disease, struggling with COVID, or dying of it.

-We would all like to have it just gone.

-We all want America to enjoy as much freedom as possible while still being a civil society.

-We all love America and none of us are trying to destroy our own home country.

Now. Let's talk about those schools having to close because of COVID outbreaks.

these teachers just like getting out of work, so they have biden dictate to the cdc.

this all came out already.
.

The powerful teachers union’s full-court press preceded the federal agency putting the brakes on a full re-opening of in-person classrooms, emails between top CDC, AFT and White House officials show.

The emails were obtained through a Freedom of Information Act request by the conservative watchdog group Americans for Public Trust and provided to The Post.

The documents show a flurry of activity between CDC Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky, her top advisors and union officials — with Biden brass being looped in at the White House — in the days before the highly-anticipated Feb. 12 announcement on school-reopening guidelines.

“Thank you again for Friday’s rich discussion about forthcoming CDC guidance and for your openness to the suggestions made by our president, Randi Weingarten, and the AFT,” wrote AFT senior director for health issues Kelly Trautner in a Feb 1 email — which described the union as the CDC’s “thought partner.”

SEE ALSO

Teachers’ union boss Randi Weingarten’s portrait of hypocrisy
“We were able to review a copy of the draft guidance document over the weekend and were able to provide some initial feedback to several staff this morning about possible ways to strengthen the document,” Trautner continued. “… We believe our experiences on the ground can inform and enrich thinking around what is practicable and prudent in future guidance documents.”

Walensky wasn’t on the Feb 1 email, but it was forwarded to her by Carole Johnson, the White House coronavirus testing coordinator. Many emails included Will McIntee, an associate director of public engagement at The White House.

“We are immensely grateful for your genuine desire to earn our confidence and your committment to partnership,” Trautner said in another email to Walensky on Feb 3.

Emails show a call between Walensky and Weingarten — the former boss of New York City’s United Federation of Teachers — was arranged for Feb 7.

The lobbying paid off. In at least two instances, language “suggestions” offered by the union were adopted nearly verbatim into the final text of the CDC document.

With the CDC preparing to write that schools could provide in-person instruction regardless of community spread of the virus, Trautner argued for the inclusion of a line reading “In the event of high community-transmission results from a new variant of SARS-CoV-2, a new update of these guidelines may be necessary.” That language appeared on page 22 of the final CDC guidance.

The AFT also demanded special remote work concessions for teachers “who have documented high-risk conditions or who are at increased risk for … COVID-19,” and that similar arrangements should extend to “staff who have a household member” with similar risks. A lengthy provision for that made it into the text of the final guidance.


Then Senator Kamala Harris listens to American Federation of Teachers president Randi Weingarten (right) talk to the press in Detroit, Michigan on May 6, 2019.

Then Senator Kamala Harris listens to American Federation of Teachers president Randi Weingarten (right) talk to the press in Detroit, Michigan on May 6, 2019.
REUTERS/Rebecca Cook
The final CDC guidance won high praise from the AFT. “Today, the CDC met fear of the pandemic with facts and evidence,” the union said in a Feb 12 press release.

Many others, however, were puzzled and angered by what they saw as the CDC willfully ignoring the science and slow-walking a return to in-person learning even as mounting evidence showed schools were not a primary source of coronavirus infections as long as they followed mitigation strategies.

SEE ALSO

The CDC’s reign of error has done incalculable harm to America
In a widely viewed CNN interview on Feb 14, anchor Jake Tapper grilled Walensky and demanded to know why the guidelines would allow schools in areas with high coronavirus community spread — know as “red zones” — to opt out of in-person reopening, noting that 99% of US kids fell within those areas, according to a CNN analysis.

“Can you point to any scientific reason for students in the United States not to return to in person classes tomorrow?” Tapper demanded several times.

“If you’re in middle school or high school we would advocate for virtual learning for that group … We really don’t want to bring community disease into the classroom,” Walensky replied, repeatedly refusing to offer a scientific explanation for the reopening avoidance. “We also know that mask breaching is among the reasons that we have transmission within schools when it happens. Somewhere around 60% of students are reliably masking. That has to be universal. So we have work to do.”

CDC Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky claims “mask breaching is among the reasons that we have transmission within schools when it happens.”
CDC Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky claims “mask breaching is among the reasons that we have transmission within schools when it happens.”
Pool via REUTERS
Dr. Monica Gandhi, a professor of medicine at the University of California, San Francisco who has written extensively on coronavirus, called the CDC-AFT emails “very, very troubling,”

“What seems strange to me here is there would be this very intimate back and forth including phone calls where this political group gets to help formulate scientific guidance for our major public health organization in the United State,” Gandhi told The Post. “This is not how science-based guidelines should work or be put together.”

The close communication between the union and the feds came despite repeated assurances from CDC and Biden officials that the medical guidelines would “follow the science” and be free of political interference.

https://nypost.com/2021/05/01/teachers-union-collaborated-with-cdc-on-school-reopening-emails/
 
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Mississippi's Hospital System Is On The Verge Of Failure As Delta Rages In The South

"Mississippi's hospital system could collapse in days

Hospital leaders at the University of Mississippi Medical Center say the state's medical system is on the verge of failure due to an influx in COVID-19 patients, staff shortages and dwindling ICU capacity.

UMMC Associate Vice Chancellor for Clinical Affairs Dr. Alan Jones said at a press conference Wednesday that hospitals across the state are full, and offered this stark warning:

"Since the pandemic began, I think the thing that hospitals have feared the most is just total failure, total failure of the hospital system. And if we track back a week or so when we look at the case positivity rate, the number of new positives that we're seeing, the rate of testing positives and the rate of hospitalizations based on what we are seeing — if we continue that trajectory within the next five to seven to 10 days, I think we're going to see failure of the hospital system in Mississippi.""
 
School closures due to COVID have taken place in:

Florida
Texas
Mississippi
Georgia
Louisiana

"In the past week:

More than 10,000 students and staff in Hillsborough County Public Schools in Florida have been isolated or quarantined, ABC News reported.
Nearly 1,000 students and staff in Nashville, Tennessee, were in quarantine or isolation.
New Orleans School District saw 299 active COVID-19 cases and more than 3,000 students and staff in quarantine, according to district data.
Ware County in Georgia closed all its public schools after a "sharp increase" in cases. More than 800 students and faculty are quarantining, outlet News4JAX reported.
20,000 students are quarantining across Mississippi, a public health official announced.
Schools in Texas counties shut down because of a shortage of staff members."

'This will be a tough year': Thousands of kids are in COVID-19 quarantine across the US, and school has just begun
 
"Nearly two weeks into the new school year, the Citrus County School District is beginning to gain insight on COVID-19 cases.

Between Aug. 10 and 18, the district has recorded 182 positive cases among staff and students. Of the 182 cases, 163 were students and 19 were district employees and teachers."

Don't send sick students to school, warns one Florida county:


"On Aug. 18, Himmel sent out an announcement to families regarding COVID-19 attendance. Himmel reminded parents to keep students who are showing cold or flu-like symptoms home from school.

“This is a simple measure, that, if done by everyone, will have a significant impact on reducing the spread of COVID-19,” Himmel wrote.

In accordance with the State Board of Education’s emergency rule, “Pupil Attendance Records for COVID-19,” students will be considered in attendance when under a COVID-19 stay-at-home order.

Blair said Himmel’s announcement was sent when principals began to notice some students were coming to school sick.

“It was just simply a reminder,” Blair said. “This isn’t the first time we’ve made that callout.”

The district typically sends these reminders during flu season, Blair said, but it’s even more important to do so with COVID-19.

However, Blair said, if a student does come to school sick, “they are sent directly to our isolation room.” These rooms are located near school clinics, where students are given masks and have their temperature and symptoms recorded by the school nurse.

“Based on what symptoms they are showing, their parent will be called,” Blair said."

Citrus County Schools get first glance at COVID-19 cases
 
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