That is true, however, without sufficient testing in place the schools will be a petri dish spreading the virus though out the community. Since is has been six months since the initial outbreak and we still do not have adequate testing, I do not see how we can reopen schools safely. At a bare minimum, we need to follow the suggestion that Ed Shadid posted upthread, either yesterday or the day prior, wherein we test not only for temperature, but a scratch and sniff test be administered (I believe he noted that 80% of those infected lose their sense of smell) and a blood/oxygen sensor check. And of course, all teachers and students (after a certain age) need to wear masks and all activities that can (ie Gym Class) should be held outside in fresh air.
BE SAFE WEAR MASKS
At my mother's elementary school a new principle is taking over this fall. This principle has decided that 4th and 5th grade classes should also move around for certain subjects throughout the day, so they'll be switching around classrooms (all at the same time in the same crowded hallway) 4 times a day. This is against the advice of the teachers, who are pretty upset about it, and a lot of the parents. They're taking absolutely no special precautions at this point and their plan for opening school back up is just a "hope it all works out". This is a smaller district, but it's just on the edge of the metro and it's not that small. It doesn't give me much hope for this fall.
Just to be clear, I am not advocating that schools should reopen for in-class instruction.
Merely pointing out that if they don't, there will be a massive burden on those who rely on schools to look after their kids during the day.
It's not just annoyance at having to deal with them or lack of socialization, there are millions of families that will be economically devastated.
Where is the leadership on schools or for that matter, much of anything regarding how we deal with this virus?
It's just "SCHOOLS MUST REOPEN" but then there is no real plan or guidance. It was largely the same for economic reopening. Even with provided guidelines they were almost universally ignored with no consequences.
Every single school and business is facing incredible challenges and everyone understands and wants to move forward, but we are failing terribly as a rich country with almost unlimited resources while everyone else seems to have put this under control months ago (except Brazil but only because they have taken the same irresponsible approach).
I don't care how you spin this, we are in a horrible position and with school and cooler months looming, what evidence is there of improvement?
If you stand back from this, it's nothing short of catastrophic and things have to change and fast.
I think this should come from the school superintendent. That being said if you have ever been to or been a part of a rural school district good luck telling them to do anything. You might get some structure in Edmond, OKC, Norman or Moore but in Skiatook or Gotebo... not happening. They are going to do the same they always have.
At the very least I feel masks should be required for all students and teachers (maybe above a certain grade level), but somehow I doubt even that will happen in many districts. At the risk of putting words in their mouth, my spouse did not sign up to be a frontline worker trapped indoors with thousands of unmasked potential disease vectors for 8 hours a day, every day, and I feel like few are considering the risks to teachers and support staff in their calculations. I know something needs to be figured out to allow schools to reopen for myriad reasons, but I'm getting increasingly freaked out about the risk they're about to assume (and bring home with them).
Timely and related to LocoAko's post above.
Yes, You Can Dine At Reopened Restaurants. But Is It Ethical?
"“This is a difficult question,” said ethicist Randy Cohen. “People who go out to eat potentially put the servers at risk, but people have to live and people need jobs.” Cohen, the author of “Be Good: How to Navigate the Ethics of Everything,” acknowledged that well-intentioned people may wish to support restaurateurs. And he refused to scapegoat the people he’s seen crowded into dining rooms and bars.
“What this shows is the utter futility of individual solutions,” he said. “We set national standards for workplace safety — even without the pandemic — so to leave this question to some individual who wants to go out and get a pizza seems like madness to me.”"
"While Cohen acknowledged the potential value of supporting local businesses in a cratering economy, he compared indoor pandemic dining to buying T-shirts made in a sweatshop; if you do it, you’re accepting that your own pleasure could cause harm to others. He also dismissed the possibility of buying your way out of guilt by leaving an extra big tip. “It does not get you off the hook,” he said. “It’s not a fee you pay to engage in antisocial behavior.”
For Cohen, the image of diners tipping big to offset endangering servers evoked scenes in Paris just before guillotines came rumbling out: “It’s like some 18th-century person with a nice powdered wig, getting into a coach and tossing some money.”"
Not strictly OKC, but here's an article that includes a link to download the spreadsheet of who received PPP funds in OK in excess of $150,000.
https://nondoc.com/2020/07/07/oklahoma-ppp-money/
I have a teacher in my family who would be forced to enter that virus sponge every day. Our schools are filthy on a good day. There were rats at Classen SAS. Schools will be death traps for faculty and staff.
People are being delusional right now because they have refused to take this seriously, but suddenly want everything to go back to “normal.” It ain’t happening in this state in this country any time soon because people are just too stupid and selfish to do the right thing and our president issues medical disinformation on a daily basis.
The discussions regarding returning to school amount to posturing. I cannot imagine the lawsuits that will ensue if they are dumb enough to go through with reopening.
673 today.
Yes, 673 new cases and 3 more deaths.
Cumulative hospitalizations went up 63.
What was the highest number of hospitalizations this spring?
I could see many teachers refusing to come back. I know most need the money, but I would believe that a fair amount of teachers have a two income household and figure they're better off roughing it on one income for a school year than potentially getting Covid. This of course further will contribute to class size, diminish education, and require substitutes and emergency certifications. Great! I'm so tired if winning.
Regarding schools reopening:
https://oklahoman.com/article/feed/1...ts-dont-reopen
You are oversimplifying an extremely complex and important issue, especially as Pete mentioned above, for people who completely rely on schools as a daycare so that they can go to work. Reopening schools is far from dumb and will in many ways be necessary for a myriad of reasons. The goal should be figuring out how to do it safely, not figuring out how to avoid doing it at all.
KocoDillon posts a good graph daily.
https://twitter.com/kocodillon/statu...420589056?s=21
There are currently 173 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 173 guests)
Bookmarks