Covid in the Classroom? Some Schools Are Keeping It Quiet....

PopsnTuff

Well-known Member
Location
Virginia USA
Some states and school districts provide detailed data on school outbreaks. Others choose to keep such information under wraps.

On the first day of school in Camden County, Ga., local Facebook groups were already buzzing with rumors that a teacher had tested positive for the coronavirus. The next day, a warning went out to school administrators: Keep teachers quiet.

“Staff who test positive are NOT to notify any other staff members, parents of their students or any other person/entity that they may have exposed them,” Jon Miller, the district’s deputy superintendent, wrote in a confidential email on Aug. 5.

But even as fears of an outbreak have grown, the district has refused to publicly confirm a single case, either to the local community or The New York Times.

Oklahoma does not require school districts to report Covid-19 cases to health departments. And some states that do, including Maine, say that privacy concerns prevent officials from sharing those details with the public. Tennessee this week backed away from a previous commitment by the governor to report the number of cases linked to schools, and is providing information only by county.
In Virginia, state law prohibits the health department from disclosing cases at specific facilities, including schools, said Tammie Smith, a spokeswoman for the state health commissioner. The commissioner had originally said the same thing about nursing homes, but was later ordered to release the data by Gov. Ralph Northam after a public outcry.....read on....

https://www.nytimes.com/2020/08/22/us/school-reopenings-coronavirus-reporting.html?

(This is just not right when not reporting cases to the health departments....to the media isn't necessary :( )
 

Wow. Way to inspire confidence in a district's commitment to keep everyone safe. Talk about low integrity.

Yeah, I'd be sending my kids back to in-person schools if I lived there, or returning to the classroom if I were a teacher. NOT.

These schools will quickly be outed for the low integrity entities they are. Social media will buzz with the tales of every absence, Covid or not, before school lets out each day.

Since the schools aren't being transparent in the first place, everyone out of class will be suspected of having Covid. And since they've already acknowledged they won't report the cases, their protestations (even when true) will fall on deaf ears.

Live by the lies and lack of transparency, die by them, too. (Sad to say, it may literally come to that.)
 
If they're keeping it "quiet", how is it that it makes the news? Hmmm?

I read the article and it states this.

"students and teachers in the coastal community on the Florida border have heard by word of mouth of more positive cases linked to district schools. Some parents said they had been called by local officials and told that their children should quarantine."
 
Sometimes heresay is the best way to find out what really is going on.
I prefer facts to rumors and speculation. But having said that, it will be impossible to keep what's happening under wraps. I think we'll find out pretty quickly whether reopening schools is working or not. No matter what the administrators say, teachers will talk. They will. Because most of them put the kids first, and they know that, at the end of the day, the administration is pretty much toothless when it comes to consequences. So we'll just have to wait and see.
 

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