So we are a mere 5 weeks into the college semester with 10 deaths already. Yet you ignored the 50 students who died last spring as outlined in the New York Times in their article on September 10th. "A New York Times survey of more than 1,600 American colleges and universities — including every four-year public institution, every private college that competes in N.C.A.A. sports and others that identified cases — has revealed at least 88,000 cases and at least 60 deaths since the pandemic began."
Ah, the 10 deaths you referred to that I posted a story showing how misleading it was? Are those the 10 deaths you're bringing up again? Because that was hilarious at first. Now it's just pathetic. Who cares if there were 88,000 cases? How many cases of the flu did colleges see in past years?
Colleges knew the risks but they reopened anyway. Here's how they got it all wrong https://www.cnn.com/2020/09/22/us/colleges-universities-reopen-covid-trnd/index.html
i certainly hope that once there is a COVID vaccine, we can get updated flu statistics from CNN and such stellar stewards of health consciousness as yourself each year at universities.
We will see how this experiment goes... in rural Newton County. The article does bring up some of the issues schools systems have with 25% or more of their students out on 14 day quarantines at any period in time. Four Missouri School Districts Agree to Let Students Skip COVID Quarantine, Return to Classes, Sports https://www.newsweek.com/four-misso...ovid-quarantine-return-classes-sports-1533687 Administrators at four school districts in Missouri agreed to let their students skip quarantine and return to their classrooms and sports even if they have been in contact with someone who has knowingly tested positive for COVID-19. The Diamond, East Newton, Neosho and Seneca school districts announced last week that exposed students would no longer be required to quarantine and could return to in-person learning, The Kansas City Star reported. The reversal in course was prompted by the Newton County Health Department, which announced September 15 that students could be allowed inside school buildings despite their exposure. Each of the four districts are located inside Newtown County, near Joplin in southeastern Missouri. District superintendents worked with officials at the county's health department to draft guidance which says students who have been in contact with someone who has tested positive for coronavirus can "continue to attend school and school activities," as long as they wear a mask and social distance, The Star reported. These students would be closely monitored for virus symptoms, the guidelines state. Larry Bergner, administrator of the county's health department, told The Star he issued the guidance because too many children were missing school to quarantine. "We were quarantining between 25 and 31 students for every one positive case," he said on Monday. "You don't have to get too many positive cases before you have most of the student body on quarantine." Bergner worried about potential mental health effects as a result of being kept at home and about a lack of food in some students' homes. The Diamond R-IV School District had so many students out of school at one point that "they had to shut down for a while," he told The Star. It was "worth trying" to treat students like essential employees, Bergner said. "If they start to show symptoms then they go home. But we were sending a lot of kids home and they were not sick. Why let them fall behind in their education?" So far, just one of the districts has announced it would stop following the health department's guidelines and will go back to telling exposed students to quarantine for at least two weeks if they are within six feet of a positive case for at least 15 minutes, The Star reported. The Neosho School District (NSD) alerted parents of the change in a notice Monday. Superintendent Jim Cummins originally agreed to the county's new guidance because as of Friday, his district had nine active coronavirus cases, but 191 students were quarantined. The district found that some students who were told to quarantine are not actually doing so, and that "students who test positive are sometimes being harassed, because their positive test sent other students home," according to the notice. Additionally, county health officials alerted Cummins to an increase in domestic abuse complaints. But the district's efforts to see if this new model could work without having a spike in positive coronavirus cases "became a political issue," the notice states, with members of the medical community supporting both sides of the matter. Ultimately, NSD "has a great deal of momentum at this time with many positives occurring throughout the district. Now is not the time to bring unwanted attention upon the district," the notice states. Beginning Tuesday—one week after initially saying it would follow the county's new guidelines—NSD announced its contact tracing team will return to sending close contacts home for quarantine. The notice alludes to the fact that local health officials and political leaders will continue to review the "costs/benefits of the current policies." "As of a week ago, in Missouri, there had been no deaths from Covid-19 in 0-17 year olds," the NSD notice states. "However, we cannot measure the impact of the social pressure, emotional stress, nutritional void, educational loss, and other impacts this virus is having on our students when they are quarantined, or have to decide whether or not to get tested." The Diamond, Seneca and East Newton districts are continuing to follow the county's new guidelines, keeping potentially exposed students in the classroom. The East Newton School District declined to comment to Newsweek at this time. Newsweek contacted the two other districts for comment, but did not hear back in time for publication. The Newton County Health Department's guidance goes against both national and statewide pandemic safety protocols, The Star reported. In its plan for reopening schools, the Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services suggested students and teachers should keep six feet away from one another, wear masks and quarantine if they come in close contact with a positive COVID-19 case. In its school reopening guidelines, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommend that if a "student, teacher, or staff member tests positive for SARS-CoV-2, those in close contact should follow CDC quarantine guidance." The guidance states that anyone within 6 feet of someone who has COVID-19 for a total of 15 minutes or more should stay home for 14 days after the last period of contact and monitor symptoms. According to each of the four school districts' reopening plans, NSD is the only one to have a mask mandate for students and staff members while at school. "Staff will be required to wear a cloth mask or plastic face shield during most of the school day, especially when physical distancing is difficult," the plan states. "Students will also be required to wear a cloth mask when social distancing guidelines cannot be maintained, or special circumstances exist." The other three districts highly recommend that students wear face coverings whenever social distancing is not possible, but it is not a requirement. All four districts are offering in-person instruction for the school year, but have virtual options as well. As of September 21, Newton County reported 1,443 total coronavirus cases and 22 fatalities. The state of Missouri has reported 115,366 total cases and 1,864 deaths, according to its health department.
Another aspect of COVID that backfires on liberals. Tell parents they can't send their kids back to school? OK at first. But like always, they push it too far and a movement that once had a spark becomes a brush fire. Support for School Choice Surges as Schools Start TOMMY SCHULTZ SEPTEMBER 23, 2020 A RealClear Opinion Research survey of 2,020 registered voters shows increasing support for school choice and for specific policy proposals. More school choice polling can be found at www.SchoolChoicePolling.com Major findings: – Since the last RealClear poll in April, for parents with kids in public schools, there’s been a ten point jump in support for the concept of school choice, from 67% to 77% – 80% of public school parents, 72% of Democrats, 76% of Republicans, and 73% of Independents support this statement: “On average, American taxpayers spend $15,424 per student nationwide on K-12 public education. Would you support or oppose giving parents a portion of those funds to use for home, virtual, or private education if public schools do not reopen for in-person classes?” – 78% of public school parents and 79% of non-public school parents support this statement: “Recent federal legislation gave governors new funding they can use for K-12 education. Some governors have let families control the funds for the purchase of education technology and materials, private school tuition, and home education. Would you support or oppose your governor sending the funding directly to families and allowing them to choose how to use those funds to support their child’s education?” More at the link above.