How and when should schools reopen?
Here are the choices:
1. To reopen schools fully for in-person instruction, with no additional funding, which is dangerous and ignores the CDC guidelines for safety; this is the option advocated by Trump and DeVos.
2. To reopen schools fully, with the funding needed to protect the safety of students and staff; thus far, neither Trump nor Mitch McConnell has shown any willingness to provide the necessary funding; the necessary money is not available.
2. To reopen them partially on staggered schedules or with blended learning; this will require at least one parent to be available to care for children when they are not in school; some districts have opted for this route.
3. To continue distance learning until there is a vaccine for the coronavirus. No one knows when a vaccine will be ready and when it will be available en masse.
Many articles have appeared about the successful reopening of schools in other nations, but it is important to bear in mind that other countries contained the virus before schools opened again.
Due to an abdication of leadership by Trump and Pence, the virus is now spreading in many states, especially Florida, Texas, Arizona, and California.
Can schools reopen safely when the virus is uncontrolled? Los Angeles and San Diego have announced that they will not reopen this fall due to the resurgence of the coronavirus.
Various reports and studies have described how other nations have returned to school. These nations “flattened the curve” and we have not.
Here are two recent examples: The Washington Post ran a long story by Michael Birnbaum about the nations that have successfully reopened their schools. The Brookings Institution published a report by Emiliana Vegas about the reopening of schools in Denmark and Finland.
Vegas wrote:
In Denmark, the decision of when and how to reopen schools was made by the central government together with the Parliament. This allowed for municipal councils (similar to school districts in the U.S.) to develop their own plans, and school leaders and teachers to do the same for each individual school based on guidelines from the National Board of Health. The legal right to quality education factored heavily in the decision to reopen. When announcing the reopening of schools, the government recognized that “in current circumstances, schools and municipalities cannot guarantee that children receive the education in all subjects for which they are entitled.”
Finland had a similar decision-making process. Minister of Education Li Andersson tweeted that to extend the school closures, the government would have to prove that opening schools would be unavoidable in the current situation and was “a matter of weighing basic rights.” Given the country had contained the spread of COVID-19, the message was that children’s right to education outweighed the health risk of going back to school.
In addition, both countries’ governments considered the equity implications of school closures and reopening. In Finland, according to a news report, the government emphasized that “the right to basic education is a subjective right laid down in the Constitution and belongs equally to everyone.” In Denmark, as secondary students spent much of the term learning remotely, end-of-year assessments were suspended for the school year. The main reason provided for suspending these assessments was to avoid increasing inequality between those students (many of whom are immigrants) who have not been able to get help from school or at home.
STAGGERING REOPENING: WHO SHOULD RETURN TO SCHOOL FIRST?
In reopening their economies, decision-makers are faced with the critical question of what services and sectors to open first. For education policymakers, a key decision is when and how to reopen preschools and primary schools, secondary schools, and higher education institutions.
In Denmark and Finland, the decision to gradually reopen included staggering by age, with schools for the youngest children reopening first. The main factor underlying the decision was the emerging evidence indicating that children play a small role in spreading the virus. In Denmark, preschools, early childhood care centers for the youngest children, and primary grades 0–5 (equivalent to K–5 in the U.S.) were reopened on April 15. In Finland, on April 29, the government announced the reopening of early childhood education and care, as well as primary and lower education (grades 1–9) on May 1 of this year. In Denmark, the central government announced that municipalities may open secondary schools (grades 6–10) on May 18.
WHAT HEALTH AND SAFETY MEASURES NEED TO TAKE PLACE IN SCHOOLS?
Once the decision on which schools to reopen first is made, a clear plan must first and foremost prioritize the health and safety of students, educators, and families. In both countries, a number of public health measures were put in place. Among these, schools prohibited the usual morning meetings held in classes at the beginning of the school day, forbade food sharing, and introduced new preventative practices like staggered student arrivals and much more frequent cleaning and handwashing practices throughout the day. In Denmark, where average class sizes were around 20 students prior to COVID-19, classes were divided into two to three smaller groups and, whenever possible, held outside. It is worth briefly noting that the Copenhagen Teacher Association raised significant concerns over dividing the classroom into smaller groups, as it increased teachers’ work hours and created staffing shortages.
Birnbaum writes:
BRUSSELS — Many countries around the world are pushing ahead with plans for full-time, full-capacity, in-person classes, after having largely avoided coronavirus outbreaks linked to schools during more tentative reopenings in the spring.
From Belgium to Japan, schools are abandoning certain social distancing measures, such as alternate-day schedules or extra space between desks. They have decided that part-time or voluntary school attendance, supplemented by distance learning, is not enough — that full classrooms are preferable to leaving kids at home. Those experiences and conclusions may offer hopeful guidance to societies still weighing how to get students and teachers back into primary and secondary classrooms.
Still, public health officials and researchers caution that most school reopenings are in their early stages. Much remains unknown about the interaction between children, schools and the virus. Schools have only reopened in countries where the virus is under better control than in many parts of the United States.
And parents and teachers, especially in Europe, have been vocal about their concerns. It is premature to say, as President Trump put it this past week, that “In Germany, Denmark, Norway, Sweden and many other countries, SCHOOLS ARE OPEN WITH NO PROBLEMS.”
While documented cases of younger students transmitting the virus to their classmates or to adults so far appear rare, there is enduring worry about the susceptibility of teens, college-age students and their teachers. And, especially in communities where the virus is still circulating widely, elaborate and expensive measures may be necessary to avoid shutting down entire schools each time a student tests positive.
Arnaud Fontanet, head of the Epidemiology of Emerging Diseases unit at the Institut Pasteur in Paris, said he “gladly” sent his four teenagers back when French schools reopened on a voluntary basis in mid-May. But he emphasized that was only because “the virus is not too much circulating in France.” “High schoolers are still contagious and primary school students are less contagious but not zero-risk,” he said.
Public health officials and researchers say they have not detected much coronavirus transmission among students or significant spikes in community spread as a result of schools being in session — at least for students under 12. Virologists warn there may be additional spread that hasn’t been recognized, since testing asymptomatic people, particularly children, remains uncommon.
But in many cases, young children who test positive have gotten it from someone in their family and do not appear to have infected others in school. Dig into reports of two or three elementary students with the virus, and often it turns out they’re siblings.
There are exceptions. At the École Louis-de-France, an elementary school in Trois Rivières, Canada, almost an entire class of 12 students tested positive in late May. And at the Cheondong Elementary School in Daejeon, South Korea, two brothers were found to have the virus on June 29, and two students who had contact with one of the brothers tested positive the next day. Such cases, though, have been rare.
Before the suspected transmission in Daejeon, South Korea’s education minister had emphasized that not a single student in the country had contracted the virus at school.
In Finland, when public health researchers combed through test results of children under 16, they found no evidence of school spread and no change in the rate of infection for that age cohort after schools closed in March or reopened in May. In fact, Finland’s infection rate among children was similar to Sweden’s, even though Sweden never closed its schools, according to a report published Tuesday by researchers from the two countries. In Sweden, researchers also found that staff members at day cares and primary schools were no more likely than people working in other professions to contract the virus. “It really starts to add up to the fact that the risk of transmission, the number of outbreaks in which the index is a child, is very low, and this seems to be the picture everywhere else,” said Otto Helve, who worked on the report as a pediatric infectious-disease specialist at the Finnish Institute for Health and Welfare. He said he sent his own children back to school.
Why young children may be less susceptible to the coronavirus or less prone to exhibit symptoms of covid-19, the disease it causes, remains a topic of hot debate among scientists. Theories range from the possibility that children have fewer of the receptors that the virus uses as a gateway into the respiratory system to their having higher overall immunity because of a greater exposure to other types of coronavirus.
But the overall observation has led some to question whether school closures were warranted in the first place. “The scientific evidence for the effects of closing schools is weak and disputed,” said Camilla Stoltenberg, director general of the Norwegian Institute of Public Health, which has advised Norway’s pandemic response. She said that although she supported her country’s March lockdown, it was less clear that Norway needed to close schools. “We should all have second thoughts about whether it was really necessary,” she said. “We see now that, after having opened schools, we haven’t had any outbreaks.”
The calculations may be different, however, for students in their teens and older, as they are thought to be somewhat more prone to the virus and more capable of spreading it. Fontanet, with the Institut Pasteur, was the lead author on twin studies that found the virus spread in the high school of one French town but not in its six primary schools before the country’s March lockdowns. In Israel, where the virus has been surging again, schools at every level have been affected. By early June, more than 100 schools had been shut and more than 13,000 students and teachers had been sent home to quarantine. The most notable outbreak was tied to a middle and high school: The Gymnasia Rehavia in Jerusalem saw 153 students and 25 staff test positive.
Israeli health authorities said they were unsure how many of those cases were the result of the virus being passed around within school buildings. “We just don’t have a good answer for that,” said Hagai Levine, the chairman of the Israeli Association of Public Health Physicians. Many students tend to spend time together in and out of school, Levine said, making it hard to pinpoint the actual site of transmission. “There does some to be evidence that there is less transmission in children under 10.” Plans are uncertain for what classes will look like in Israel on Sept. 1, when the next school year begins.
In many nations preparing to reopen school buildings for the first time in the fall, social distancing concerns are dominating the debate. The Italian government, which closed schools when the pandemic first exploded and made no attempt to restart in the spring, has pledged to restart classes in mid-September and has committed to “less-overpacked classrooms.” “We don’t want chicken coops,” Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte said in a national address.
The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommends that desks should be spaced six feet apart. But many countries that resumed in-person classes in May and June have already abandoned some social distancing measures, at least in primary schools. In Japan, where schools reopened shortly after the country’s state of emergency was lifted in May, children initially attended on alternate days in some schools to allow for more space in classrooms. But classes are largely back to normal now, albeit with students and teachers wearing masks, washing hands regularly and taking daily temperature checks…
When France shifted from voluntary to mandatory attendance for primary and middle school students for the last two weeks of June, a social distancing requirement of four square meters between students was reduced to one meter laterally. “This allows us to accommodate all students,” Education Minister Jean-Michel Blanquer said at the time of the announcement. Similarly, before the biggest wave of school reopenings in Belgium in early June, policymakers declared that strict physical distancing rules would not be enforced, allowing more students in each classroom at once.
Belgian schools are now closed again for the summer, but leaders have an ambitious reopening plan for Sept. 1. For kids under 12, classes will remain in session, full-time and full-capacity, no matter how bad the second wave of infections gets in the country. If current infection rates stay steady in Belgium, students 12 and older will attend school four days a week, with an additional half-day of virtual schooling. Officials would dial back the in-person schooling for the older children if there is a second wave. To some extent, these shifts reflect growing confidence that bringing children together may not lead to a spike in infections. There is also rising concern about the downsides of keeping students home.
Belgium’s reopening was accelerated by an open letter from hundreds of pediatricians arguing that the educational cost of keeping schools closed was worse than the health risk of reopening them. In Germany, some public health experts have welcomed plans to drop a 1.5-meter minimum distance rule and resume full-capacity classes after summer vacation. Policymakers fear that digital learning has put poorer students at a greater disadvantage and that there would be a rising mental health toll on students if school restrictions dragged on.
But the shift away from social distancing is also about practical concerns. “Basically, the difficulty is enforcing social distancing among students,” said Fontanet of the Institut Pasteur. He said distancing is hard for high school students, but especially for younger kids. “People have more or less given up on that entirely at this stage,” he said.
Although schools in Israel initially resumed with strict rules about temperature checks, carefully spaced-out desks and masks, critics complained that the precautions quickly lapsed. “Within two or three days, that all fell away,” said Dan Ben-David, president of the Shoresh Institution for Socioeconomic Research. Italy’s education minister, Lucia Azzolina, said that to keep classroom sizes at acceptable levels, districts would have to reopen shuttered school buildings and transfer some students elsewhere. She also floated the idea of holding classes in theaters, cinemas and museums — “even parks,” she said.
But countries that have resumed classes already have found that it’s easier and cheaper to welcome all students back to their classrooms than it is to devise complicated schedules with multiple shifts or to find new space. Creating ‘bubbles’ within schools may be more important.
In Israel, hypervigilant public health officials mandated that an entire school close any time a single coronavirus case was detected among students or staff. By contrast, in Germany, when a student tested positive, that class was put into a mandatory two-week quarantine, but the rest of the school continued on. Clearly, the German model is less disruptive.
Some health experts have thus come to advocate that more important than social distancing within a classroom are efforts to create bubbles within schools, to limit potential contamination and the need to shut everything down.
England started sending some grades back on a voluntary basis in June. But when schools fully reopen in September for mandatory, full-time, in-person classes, elementary school students will be in “class bubbles” of up to 30 and high school students in “year bubbles” of up to 240.
Quebec, the Canadian province hit hardest by the coronavirus, experimented with various means of social distancing when it reopened elementary schools outside Montreal in May. Classes were limited to 15 students. Libraries remained closed. Recess times were staggered. Some schools painted green dots on schoolyard grounds to mark sufficient separation. Bubbles will be introduced when elementary and high schools reopen for compulsory in-class instruction in the fall. Within classrooms, students will form groups of up to six students who won’t have to maintain social distancing. Bubbles must keep a one-meter distance from each other and two meters from teachers.
Helve, the Finnish infectious-disease specialist, noted that bubbles may be especially valuable in societies with high infection rates, such as the United States, where it may be inevitable that a student or teacher shows up with the virus at some point. “How do you minimize the impact on the school?” he said. “The more cases you have in a society, the more likely it is that you will have an outbreak at a school, or that you will have a teacher or a parent or a child who brings the virus to the school.”
In part because there haven’t been many outbreaks associated with schools, some students, parents and teachers who initially resisted classroom reopenings have come around. One survey of French-speaking parents in Belgium found that 96 percent of respondents planned to send their children back to school in the fall. Technically, they won’t have a choice. Education is compulsory in Belgium for children 6 and older, and although the requirement was suspended this spring, it will be back in force in September.
That’s in line with moves by many countries away from voluntary in-person attendance, which saw limited uptake. British Prime Minister Boris Johnson, who was forced to delay plans for a full reopening of elementary schools in England after strong resistance from teaching unions and some parents, intends to forge ahead in the fall. “We want them all back in September,” said Johnson. “We’ve got to start thinking of a world in which we are less apprehensive about this disease.”
In France, when schools reopened in May on a voluntary basis, statistics from the Education Ministry showed that only about 1.8 million out of 6.7 million nursery and primary schoolers went back, along with 600,000 out of 3.3 million middle schoolers.
France had hoped reopening would address the inequalities evident under distance learning. But the government found that students from wealthier families were more likely to be among those who returned to their classrooms, while many poorer families continued to keep their children home. The education minister suggested the gap had to do with a lack of trust. French officials ultimately made school attendance mandatory for the final two weeks of classes in June, before the summer holidays began. Families and teachers questioned the need for such a scramble for so little class time. Some accused the government of being more concerned about freeing parents to return to work than about the needs of students and teachers. That’s in contrast to the United States, where a growing chorus of families complain that state and local governments are downplaying the need for kids to be in school before parents can return to their workplaces. The French government defended its decision. “Two weeks count; two weeks are not nothing, whether it’s out of an educational aspect or a psychological aspect,” Blanquer, the education minister, said. “School should never be considered as a day-care center of sorts.”
I just went out yesterday and purchased materials to make dividers for the 2-pperson tables in my classroom (I have 20 such tables). Cost me about $200 for supplies. That’s not counting the extra supplies, PPE , especially disposable masks for kids who don’t bring the ONE mask the district is offering, and tons of extra cleaning supplies (if I can find them) that I have to buy for this year. I work in an almost Title 1 school, so we ate poor but get no extra help. I am also making cloth masks like crazy. No time to actually plan lessons–I have to keep my students and me safe first.
It is ridiculous that in such a wealthy state you should have to craft your own protections from your own pocket. You should write an article for a widely read publication about your ordeal. This is shameful.
If you have some non-working Latino mothers, they may be willing to help. I put on numerous district wide ethnic dance performances for many years at my school. I bought the material, and the Latino mom’s sewed the costumes. Even some of the older girls were very skilled in sewing and willing to help.
My state isn’t particularly wealthy (Utah). I have a fairly large Latinx population, but getting a hold of everyone at this time of year is hard, and I don’t mind the sewing. It’s the cost and the fact that I can’t just get what I need from the district that is frustrating.
There’s plenty of money, but you also have a significant poor Latino population. You want keep everyone safe, but the district should help defray the costs.
Utah spends only about $7000 per student. There is simply no money.
McLeans is news from Canada.
Every U.S. state is accumulating new virus cases at a faster clip than Canada. Yep, all 50.
Our interactive map puts the pace of America’s coronavirus outbreak in startling perspective
By Jason Markusoff
July 15, 2020
On Tuesday, Canada logged 331 new cases of coronavirus. Not only was that figure dwarfed south of the border by pandemic hotspots like Texas (10,745 cases) and Florida (9,194), but most states—32, to be exact—reported on Tuesday more new residents testing positive for the virus than all of Canada did.
This is the sort of thing Canadian officials are doubtless keeping in mind as they consider extending the Canada-U.S. border closure by another month, beyond the current end date of July 21. To put things in perspective, they might also bear in mind that only California is more populous than Canada.
On a per capita basis, the coronavirus crisis in the United States is so bad that all 50 states are logging more new cases than Canada is. Every single state. That ranges from Québec’s placid neighbour Vermont, where the seven-day average for new cases (per person) is only 1.3 times worse than Canada’s; to Florida, where the new case rate is a jarring 65 times worse than Canada’s…
https://www.macleans.ca/society/health/every-u-s-state-is-accumulating-new-virus-cases-at-a-faster-clip-than-canada-yep-all-50/
It would be interesting to see how much money was put into these school reopenings- from daily testing, to classroom reconfigurations, transportation, protective wear for students and staff, and other necessary supply costs. Also, is there a detailed plan of how these “bubble” areas within schools are set up and work?
Of course, the bottom line here is that schools that reopened in Europe and
Asia did so on a downturn in new COVID cases. And even then, closed schools who saw new outbreaks. We in the US, with the exception of few states, are heading into schools reopening with a surge of new cases, far higher than when schools were closed originally.
The first step towards a full reopening is to control the virus.
That is why the WHO guidelines that Trump keeps suppressing are important. The guidelines are based on science. not politics. The infection threshold should be no more than 5% for fourteen days. I we were led by logic and science, then only 19 states meet the criteria.https://coronavirus.jhu.edu/testing/testing-positivity
I think “bubble” refers to one classroom group & its teacher staying put – no mixing with others. Doable only for elemsch, & still leaves problems unaddressed: safe-sized classgroups means doubling available space – or staff – or cutting in-person classtime for each kid to 2-3 days/wk – & unless these are half-days, eating [no-mask] time is a problem, as is playtime on shared eqpt, & more reqd breaks in shared bathrooms… & 1/2days are safer anyway, minimizing time inside in a group. [w/community spread what it is in US, would you choose to sit inside w/15 people for more than 3 hrs, for any reason at all?]
For midsch or hisch, I’ve been working thro variations on the “bubble,” imagining expanding it to a small cohort of classrooms w/rotating subject teachers. Safe? teachers have much more exposure. One could minimize that by rotating subjects instead of teachers, i.e., a qtr-yr for each subject (& each cohort taking a different subject in any given qtr)… but… Schooldays would still have to be limited to 3 hrs for all the same reasons.
Summary: the “bubble” looks like an important idea in the sense of isolating small cohorts within the school from each other. It could contain viral exposure to smaller groups, and minimize the outage time for teachers/ students when infections occur, so the whole school doesn’t have to go through cyclical shutdowns. However, none of that will work unless schooldays are short– eliminating communal maskless meals & need for playbreaks [on shared eqpt], & minimizing # of bathroom breaks.
I see all the issues and it’s just so complicated.
I just am so sad that we didn’t do anything at all to help students. I feel as if the generations coming up get consistently screwed in this country (and I accept my role in that) and it is brutally unfair.
Our political leaders didn’t even try to help public schools. They have worked harder on propping up the travel and entertainment industry than schools.
If we cared about education as much as we yammer about caring for it, it would have been the first priority instead of the last. We have let an entire generation down and it’s not even the first time in the last 20 years. We did the exact same thing in the financial crisis. Why weren’t schools considered essential and supporting them an emergency?
Congress was fast to bail out corporations and industries. The charter industry grabbed hundreds of nmmilluons from the PPP Program. Donald and Betsy want public schools to reopen but they offer no help. Just threats.
I just read an article in the Daily Beast about the school opening experiment in Israel. We don’t need to guess at the probable result. https://www.thedailybeast.com/israeli-data-show-school-openings-were-a-disaster-that-wiped-out-lockdown-gains
Daedalus: My guess is that it’s simply a matter of time before each district has to close down the opening up of schools.
It’s just like the states that opened up too early. Stuff will happen and SLOWLY administrators will reluctantly admit it was a mistake. It will take longer for governors to realize the real problem.
The big question is, “How many children getting sick needs to happen before a school closes?” How many adults will get sick and die before the administrators realize this whole thing was a huge mistake?
Trump NEVER makes mistakes so forget about him admitting he was wrong. I’m sure he’ll blame unions, teachers, school boards…just about anybody whom he can safely vilify.
I agree with you about the almost certainty that the blame will be put (once again) upon the heads of teachers. So, why is there no organized resistance from that quarter? Why no outcry, no boycott?
I taught for 25 years at the High School level and found that many ‘teachers’ were to ‘proud’ to be associated with those ‘workers’ in ‘unions’. So, they formed an ‘association’ rather than a union. In union there is strength, in association there is culpability.
This is what will happen in the red states, if they open the economy without having the virus under control. Even the, social distancing and mask wearing must be required to keep the numbers under control. We have too many right wing delusionals leading states down the Covid rabbit hole.
cx:Even then,…
I take it you’re from a ‘blue state’.
Whereas it is true that ‘opening up the economy’ will cause more death, let me remind you that there is no ‘red state’ even close to the number of deaths per million seen in New York, or New Jersey, or Massachusetts, or Connecticut. Until the ‘red states’ pass that threshold, I suggest you leave your regional bias out of the discussion.
Should ‘red states’ be more restrictive? Of course! However there’s nothing more irritating than the twin effect of the pot calling the kettle black and the sense of superiority (bigotry) coming from the ‘blue states’ as a result of their winning the Civil War. There’s also nothing more likely to push the rural and the South away from responsible cooperative action than ‘blue-blood’ criticism.
I’m sorry to ‘blow up’, but the term ‘red states’ just trips my trigger. It’s a ‘dog whistle’ that reaches the ears of those superiors who live in the Northeast. Will opening schools effect California? Just you watch!
Daedalus, do not look at total numbers of COVID-19th deaths when comparing blue to red states. Look at the percentage of deaths to total population.
For instance:
California has had 7,409 deaths with a population is 39.51 million = 0.01875 percent of the total population.
Arizona has had 2,434 deaths with a population of 7.279 million = 0.03339 percent of the population – HIGHER THAN CALIFORNIA
Arkansas had had 335 total deaths with a population of 3.018 million = 0.0111 percent of the population – LOWER THAN CALIFORNIA
Florida has had 4,521 deaths with a population of 21.48 million = 0.021 percent – HIGHER THAN CALIFORNIA
Louisana has had 3,461 deaths with a population of 4.649 million = 0.0744 percent – way higher than California
Georgia has had 3,091 deaths with a population of 10.62 million = 0.029 percent – HIGHER THAN CALIFORNIA.
This is actually to Lloyd, and I’m hoping it appears under his remarks concerning my data. I couldn’t reply directly to his post, but I trust that he will see this message.
No, Lloyd, I did not use deaths as opposed to percentage. If you read my post, I said “deaths PER MILLION”! I used the “worldometer” site for my data, and chose for my examples the States that had over 1,000 deaths PER MILLION.
True, as of today Louisiana has over 700 deaths per million, however that State is a bit complex, thanks to Mardi Gras. You see, on that date tons of ‘blue staters’ descended upon NOLA. They were invited, of course, but the celebration was a huge super-spreader event, and in late Feb, everyone believed there was little danger. Still, let me point out that LA (a very early ‘hot spot’) has less than half the deaths PER MILLION of New York and New Jersey.
You cherry-pick, my friend. I dare you to add up the ‘blue state’ deaths (all of them) and divide by the blue state population. Then do the same with the ‘red states’ (you can even include the mixed case of LA, but that’s really not fair, is it?…). What numbers do you get?
I live in Tennessee. To date, we have 117 deaths PER MILLION. California has 190. Washington (home of the first identified and recorded case) has 188 (very, very good), however New York and New Jersey refused to acknowledge any cases for quite a while. As a result, their head-in-the-sand approach (trumpian?) cost them dearly. So, you see, it has nothing to do with ‘blue state vs. red state’.
The folks in the ‘blue state’ northeast (and the major media outlets operating from that area) are trying to point the finger at ‘rubes’, or ‘hicks’, or ‘red states’ to divert attention from their own failure, a failure that arose from their self-satisfied, superiority-complex mindset. Remember, Trump is a product of New York, not Alabama.
We all have a certain amount of learned prejudice. Some of it has been internalized to the point that it becomes invisible to ourselves.
Daedalus,
No one but you has made an issue of red state vs. blue state.
I have many friends and relatives in the South.
Right now, I’d say that Florida and Georgia are not shining examples of how to deal with a pandemic.
And don’t compare statistics about infections and deaths until the pandemic has run its course.
The northeast got slammed hard at the beginning.
But New York, New Jersey, Connecticut, and Massachusetts have largely beaten back the virus, while governors in the south are telling their people not to wear masks.
How’s that gonna go?
Dianne,
The term ‘red state’ implies the South to most. You, in fact, confirmed that interpretation with your reply to me. Therefore, when someone uses the term, we all know what they’re talking about (wink, wink).
I was responding to someone that used the term (retired teacher). I pointed out the contentious implication. Simply using ‘red state’ implies ‘blue state’, as surely as using the word ‘off’ implies the existence of ‘on’.
I didn’t grow up in the South. In fact, I taught in Ohio and New Jersey. However, after retiring to Tennessee over 20 years ago, it’s all too easy to see why my neighbors (some families here since the early 1800’s) treat Northern implants with suspicion. One need only observe the interaction between the ‘locals’ and the folks from the Northeast who usually choose to live in ‘gated communities’ to see the disdain my neighbors receive from way to many ‘newbies’.
I love my neighbors, warts and all. They are open, trustworthy and honest almost to a fault. I’m a ‘leftie’ atheist, so I don’t usually vote as they do. Yet, a wise man once said that we should tend to the beam in our own eye before we address the splinter in the eye of someone else.
One of those beams is our blindness to the bigotry that festers in our ‘melting pot’ Northern cities. We pretend that the problem is ‘over there’, in the South. Why?
I, like you, think that we should wait for the final numbers on covid19 before we jump to conclusions. Those who criticize ‘red states’ today, however, are refusing to see the present picture. They are addressing the splinter and ignoring the beam. Perhaps they should start by saying, “Hey, we really messed up. Let me tell you what we did wrong, so you can learn from our mistakes”. Funny, I almost never see that approach.
Daedalus says “The term ‘red state’ implies the South to most. You, in fact, confirmed that interpretation with your reply to me. Therefore, when someone uses the term, we all know what they’re talking about (wink, wink).”
I’m not sure if Daedauls meant this comment for me. If he did, he is so wrong.
I have always thought that Red States meant all of the states controlled by the GOP and that includes Alaska, but only as long as the GOP controls all three branches of each of the governments in those states.
Evidence: a post that Lloyd wrote and published back in August 2012 comparing “Conservative Red versus Liberal Blue – a new way to see politics in America” that clearly establishes that I was not referring specifically to the South. When I researched the facts for that post (next link), I had no idea where the facts and/or numbers would lead. The map I used (I didn’t not make it) shows blue and red colors and shades in between.
The conclusion clearly reveals that the Red controlled states are not as educated as the most of the blue states and are more corrupt. That was only the tip of the iceberg.
https://lloydlofthouse.org/2012/08/22/conservative-red-versus-liberal-blue-a-new-way-to-see-politics-in-america/
(wink, wink)
And, in every Red controlled state, there are registered Democrats and Independent voters just like there are registered Republicans in every Blue controlled state.
“Let me tell you what we did wrong, so you can learn from our mistakes.”
Canada, Australia and New Zealand are doing much better than the whole United States. Should they be telling us what they did wrong so we can learn from their mistakes? OR, should we look at success in bringing down numbers as an insult?
Ada County in Boise now has rampant spreading of COVID-19. The mayor of Boise imposed a mask wearing law. Now, there is a petition going around to get rid of the mayor.
So, I guess its wrong to say that Boise is having problems because they follow Trump who has shown by his behavior that nobody needs to wear a mask unless they visit a hospital. [PS. Idaho is a red state.]
Carol…
I said, “those who criticize red states….” Somehow, I don’t think the countries you mention do that.
Dare all you want, Daedalus. I’m not going to waste time adding up all that data. Even though there are loyal Red people in every state, even blue ones, STUPID is much bigger in red states.
I dare you to discover what happened in February and what PBS reported today about San Francisco’s Chinatown (regarding COVID-19) with one of the densest populated areas west of Manhattan.
Well, Lloyd….
I said you ‘cherry-picked’. You didn’t respond (and said you wouldn’t). Cherry-picking data is considered dishonest. You must not be a math or science teacher. “Case studies” are not a valid means of proving a general point.
I responded because you misrepresented my post. You implied that I was in error because I used total deaths instead of percentages, to which I pointed out that I used deaths PER Million, not total deaths.
An appropriate response from you would have been, “Oops, I didn’t see that ‘per million’. Sorry”. So, why couldn’t you admit a mistake?
However, you ignored your mistake and ‘doubled down’ on your attack on ‘red states’ by calling them “STUPID”. Let’s examine the word, “stupid”.
“Stupid” appears to be a ‘mixed evaluative’. It (of course) means ‘bad’, but what is the descriptive meaning?
Well, it means “not intelligent…..” However, what is ‘intelligence’? Is it the result of an ‘intelligence test’? One need only read Gould’s “The Mismeasurement of Man” to understand that ‘intelligence’ is a very, very fuzzy concept, and linked to racism. In fact, the term is so fuzzy as to be undefinable without using ‘circular logic’ (a fallacy). You may ‘believe’ that intelligence exists, perhaps as a general ‘ability to learn’, but unless you can measure such an ability over all spheres of activity, the ‘belief’ is a religion. Not that I’m against your personal religion, as long as you keep it to yourself.
So, if we can’t define a measurable ‘intelligence’, then the word ‘stupid’ devolves to simply a personal opinion (pure evaluative), doesn’t it?
So, we see that you don’t like ‘red states’. Fine. That’s who you are.
Well, Daedalus, there is a difference between a sample and deliberately selecting the facts you want. I had no preferences. Just selected California and a few red states as an example. That’s it.
And, you have no idea who I am and probably never will because your biases guides you in your opinions like it does for almost everyone.
The virus has no politics. The issue is about public health, and reducing the number of infections.
I’m hoping this shows up after your ‘the virus has no politics’ post.
Yep, I agree 100%.
Isn’t is sad that our country (and the world) is so fractured that we can’t see that division leads to weakness, particularly in the face of an actual (not manufactured) global threat?
“New York and New Jersey refused to acknowledge any cases for quite a while. As a result, their head-in-the-sand approach (trumpian?) cost them dearly.”
I wonder what you’re even talking about. NJ’s first case was confirmed on March 4th. Our 11th case was confirmed on March 9th– it happened close to me: that district emergency-closed for 10 days March 10th a.m. Districts began closing under local orders soon after; the majority of schools were closed by March 17th, & Gov Murphy made it official the 18th. Stay-at-home order followed on the 21st.
What “cost us dearly” was rapid-fire spread from incoming Euro travelers to the metro-NYC area.
I think you are correct about the first official case in NY/NJ being around March 4. By then, cases were exploding in Italy. Also, the first US case was around January 20 in Washington, so NY and NJ were well aware that the virus was on the way almost a month and a half before they ‘recorded’ an official case. I’ve read that epidemiologists are rather sure that the virus had gotten to the area much earlier (based upon the sudden spring across a wide area in NY/NJ). Don’t forget, first case in Washington 6 weeks earlier.
Right you are about the ‘eurotravellers’, but it takes a week or two before obvious symptoms develop. Why weren’t they quarantined upon return? There is a NYT article published on Mar 15 (I think) that indicates that the eurotravellers were still walking into the country with almost no serious examination well into the middle of March.
Trump had already said that the governors were in charge of the States. Why didn’t the governors use that authority to quarantine returning travelers? This is what I mean by complacency.
Daedalus, there’s no doubt a well-earned chip on the shoulder for Southerners v Northerners. No doubt plenty of old-timey, ignorant attitude up here toward “hicks,” “yokels” etc (which extends to anybody living in nearby ag or hill regions, & excludes their many relatives who moved South!). But “red state” means run by the GOP, & includes many non-Southern states. And red states have made a fetish recently of shunning sensible public-health measures, which endangers us all.
Daedalus: Welcome to Tennessee. I have been a part of the state for all but 5 years of my 64, and I remember when the state was still watching its population move to the North. The reversal of this trend, beginning in the early 1980s, has changed the political landscape forever. Tennessee used to have representatives who were oriented toward good governmental policy. When the Dixiecrats bolted the Democratic Convention, our two senators refused to sign their diatribe against de-segregation. It did not hurt them.
After years of migration, the state is solidly Republican. Part of this is the stirring of racial hatred due to the race-baiting tactics of the right, an aspect of the more general “southern strategy.” Another aspect of it is the degeneration of he Democratic Party in the leadership of the party during the 1970s. Lamar Alexander had to be sworn in early in 1978 to prevent a corrupt governor from selling pardons t prisoners. A third conservative influence has been the maturation of fundamentalist political activity coalescing around the abortion issue.
I quite share your defensive posture when Tennessee is criticized from other parts of the country, but I am fairly critical myself of my fellow Tennesseans, who often seem to hold outlandish political beliefs. I know many who do not think that there is a pandemic at all. I miss the kinder days when we were allowed to be good to each other instead of being induced to fight and draw lines in the sand for others to cross.
Thanks for the note, Roy,
I thoroughly agree. No place is perfect.
I do find, however, that in Tennessee it’s still fairly easy to simply not talk about politics or religion with my friends. I respect their privacy in certain areas and they respect mine, and there’s alway a lot of common ground in between. Thus we can work and play together.
Another note: I spent 4 years as an unpaid lobbyist (retirement floundering) for forestry regulation in Nashville, 3-4 days a week when the Legislature was in session (max, 6 months). This was, maybe, 19-16 years ago, when the House leader was a Blue Dog, the Governor was a Democrat and Ron Ramsey was the Senate Majority Leader. The first year I just showed up and ‘met’. By the second, however, my persistence was evident, and I had begun to gain the trust of a few people on the environment committees. By the third, I was giving presentations to joint committees and writing questions for supportive legislators to ask in hearings. And, in year 4 I got a small, pro-environment amendment to pass overwhelmingly over the objection of the Chamber of Commerce (Wayne Sharber, as I recall).
Now, I’m not a lawyer. I was a High School Teacher for 25 years. Can you imagine any other State where a Newbie would gain that kind of access? It certainly couldn’t happen in New Jersey. But, Tennessee was (at least) that open to an ordinary citizen.
During this process (which took a lot of work, but enjoyable work) I met many a Republican and (can you believe it!) opposition lobbyist that I still think well of. [I’m a blazing Socialist, in case you wonder, WAY to the left of Biden]. However getting the Republican Majority Leader to OK the bill was good, and I had learned that (contrary to popular conception) politicians in Tennessee could be counted on to keep their word (the trick is to pin them down, not so simple). I didn’t actually visit the Leader very much, but word ‘trickled up’. He knew my word was good, and so we agreed before the Chamber of Commerce even knew what was up. But, those were the days (not so long ago) when ALEC had yet to get an almost stranglehold on the Tennessee Legislature. It was before the ‘Tea Party Revolution’.
Working for free eventually wears one out, so I quit after my ‘victory’ and adopted a new project involving the local Farmers Market (another story with a wildly different cast of characters, but the same positive feelings).
I love Tennessee. Not because I can jerk people around, but rather because I can learn so much from them.
This thread of comments is refreshing. Everyone makes good points with which I agree and respectfully disagree, but even with those, I can understand and relate. I am as guilty as anyone about making sweeping generalizations of states, especially my spiritual home of Louisiana, with which I have and odd love-hate relationship. However I most agree with Lloyd’s comment, “And, in every Red controlled state, there are registered Democrats and Independent voters just like there are registered Republicans in every Blue controlled state.”
I just want to remind everyone that the source of red/blue state terminology is Tim Russert, who, in my view, is as responsible for the dumbing down of American political discourse as any media figure in our history. He distilled every interview, every comment, into “us/them” or political competitive terms. Nuance, explanation, illumination, and complexity were anathema to him. But he did it in a folksy, smiling way–Reaganesque, if you will–that permeated into our culture like a slowly metastasizing cancer. It amazes me that people look back fondly on him.
Here’s the most important distinction he never made and upon which, I think, Lloyd hits the bullseye. The divide is mostly, but not exclusively, one of urban/rural, and more precisely, one of people who either have experience or seek out knowledge about others vs. those who generally don’t; those who are secure and confident their narrow experience is enough to explain a world view. This is by no means universal. But getting rid of the red/blue state terminology and what it represents would be an important first step toward developing a healing, constructive polity.
For example:
There are a lot of African Americans living in “red states” (as well as other people of color). While I see many white people in red states accusing those in “blue states” of looking down on them, I don’t recall many people of color claiming to be victimized because supposedly the elites in blue states look down on them.
Sometimes it seems as if it is just an excuse when a governor of a red state – and many white supporters in that red state – decide that science is irrelevant and mask-wearing is infringing on their “rights”. (although systemically making it harder for people to vote is perfectly fine as long as it isn’t Trump voters who are inconvenienced).
You don’t need to see numbers to understand the difference between NY and California – where mistakes were made but the leadership is trying to address the pandemic using science – and the states led by Republican governors who are only concerned with promoting whatever Trump wants.
If Trump suddenly said everyone must wear masks, those Republican Governors would say everyone must wear masks. They would not say “Trump is wrong, you should still do whatever you want”. There are extremely rare occasions that a Republican Governor won’t support whatever new epidemiological falsehood Trump thinks is best for his re-election chances. But that doesn’t last long. Even the Republican Gov. in Ohio learned his lesson and speaks out less and cases are rising again there.
GregB, as a rural kid who became an urban adult, couldn’t agree more on that general distinction. It is only & very general, though. It’s not urban knowledge-seekers vs rural provincialism; looks more like a Venn diagram. My home rural area contains that schism within itself, as it hosts a large university & a med-size college. The uni/ college student population is equivalent to the local pop. While the college draws many urban students, the uni has a large ag component, & draws students from around the nation & world. The post-secondary-ed biz provides the major source of jobs, while simultaneously robbing local tax revenues [imagine a company town where the employer is tax exempt!]. That maximizes town-gown issues, which do tend to break along that typically rural outsider/ insider line.
For much of my lifetime the knowledge-seeker pop infiltrated the surrounds, creating an ever-larger liberal pocket. However that’s been reversing as rich-poor gap becomes a chasm. The contrast between rich college kids & poor locals is stark now. E.g., the town hisch has double the % reduced/free-lunchers as in my day– & 60% of the kids lack the tech necessities for remote learning. This econ paradigm is the driver. It activates and intensifies all the underlying cultural divisions.
Yup, Daedalus, re: NY/NJ was behind the 8-ball not banning incoming Euro travelers sooner than 3/13. Italy had suspended flights from China 1/31 & declared state of emergency when 2 Chinese tourists tested positive. But their situation only exploded into intl awareness in late Feb: they found two small clusters 2/21 (rapid spread ensued). With foresight and caution, NY might have acted as soon as 3/1. All eyes were still on Wash state, assuming a West-to-East spread.
But this is important context: when first US case was confirmed 1/21 (a traveler returned to Wash state from Wuhan), this was the science then known: “While originally thought to be spread animal-to-person, there are growing indications that limited person-to-person spread is happening. It’s unclear how easily this virus is spreading between people.” (CDC 1/21)
So I picture the whole period between 1/21 and 3/1 as watching a train crash in slow motion as data began to confirm worst fears. My biggest question is who know what when about what was going on in China between Nov ’19 and end-Jan ’20.
“My biggest question is who know what when about what was going on in China between Nov ’19 and end-Jan ’20.”
China’s central government reported the virus to the World Health Organization on December 31, 2019
“31 Dec 2019, Wuhan Municipal Health Commission, China, reported a cluster of cases of pneumonia in Wuhan, Hubei Province. A novel coronavirus was eventually identified.”
https://www.who.int/news-room/detail/27-04-2020-who-timeline—covid-19
The BBC reported about Wuhan Dr. Li Weliang, who first publicly tried to report the discovery of the virus earlier in December 2019.
“Last December he sent a message to fellow medics warning of a virus he thought looked like Sars – another deadly coronavirus.
But he was told by (LOCAL Wuhan) police to “stop making false comments” and was investigated for “spreading rumours”.
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-china-51409801
CNN Health also has a timeline for virus.
First entry for the timeline: “December 31, 2019 – Cases of pneumonia detected in Wuhan, China, are first reported to WHO. During this reported period, the virus is unknown. The cases occur between December 12 and December 29, according to Wuhan Municipal Health.”
https://www.cnn.com/2020/02/06/health/wuhan-coronavirus-timeline-fast-facts/index.html
I found a reverse timeline from “Think Global Health.org” – To find the beginning of this timeline in December 2019, you have to scroll to the end of the page. I copied and pasted the first four entries:
December 31
December 29
December 8
December 1
https://www.thinkglobalhealth.org/article/updated-timeline-coronavirus
The Lancet link leads to this page:
I copied one of the paragraphs from the Lancet page:
“In December, 2019, a series of pneumonia cases of unknown cause emerged in Wuhan, Hubei, China, with clinical presentations greatly resembling viral pneumonia.9
Deep sequencing analysis from lower respiratory tract samples indicated a novel coronavirus, which was named 2019 novel coronavirus (2019-nCoV). Thus far, more than 800 confirmed cases, including in health-care workers, have been identified in Wuhan, and several exported cases have been confirmed in other provinces in China, and in Thailand, Japan, South Korea, and the USA.”
https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(20)30183-5/fulltext
NOTE: none of the reputable timelines mention any knowledge of the virus before December 2019.
Many thanks for rounding up this good data, Lloyd. So, the way I read the 1/24 Lancet article, reported cases in Wuhan went from 1 on Dec 8th to 800 by 1/24-ish (maybe a couple of days earlier). Per CNN timeline, the virus was still unidentified at the time China reported a cluster of cases to WHO on 12/31, though they suspected a SARS-like coronavirus. The cluster might have been no bigger than, say, 40 when they reported it. That 12/31 data synchs w/ the CDC’s early understanding of virus– but CDC was reporting its analysis on 1/24. By then, Wuhan had 800 cases. So something got lost between cup (12/31) and lip (1/24). To mix way too many metaphors, WHO dropped the ball?
The doctor who reported the virus and warned the world was told to shut up. He died of the coronavirus.
Trump was holding that cup with shakey hands as he lifted it toward his lips while ignoring what was being reported about the virus.
But other world leaders were acting starting in January. They were not ignoring the problem like Trump was.
“Coronavirus: how Asian countries acted while the west (replace ‘west’ with ‘Trump’) dithered”
…
“America faces an epic choice …
… in the coming year, and the results will define the country for a generation. These are perilous times. Over the last three years, much of what the Guardian holds dear has been threatened – democracy, civility, truth.
“Science and reason are in a battle with conjecture and instinct to determine public policy in this time of a pandemic. Partisanship and economic interests are playing their part, too. Meanwhile, misinformation and falsehoods are routine. At a time like this, an independent news organisation that fights for data over dogma, and fact over fake, is not just optional. It is essential.”
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/mar/21/coronavirus-asia-acted-west-dithered-hong-kong-taiwan-europe
My school district just announced our probable plans to open in the fall, stating that the data shows schools are not a spreader of COVID and that we are all collectively responsible for staying safe.
My prediction is that opening will include a series of lists and memos that ultimately do little more than hold teacher’s “accountable” for keeping kiddos distanced and schools safe.
I also just got an email from EdWeek that goes along with the theme of teacher accountability and school openings:
https://www.edweek.org/tm/articles/2020/07/16/returning-to-the-classroom-safely-is-just.html?cmp=eml-enl-tu-news1&M=59618034&U=2177758&UUID=dcf0d71afa621b453375d358f2c0ffc2
“theme”
Yes, by all means, let’s force teachers to be in classrooms. Then, let’s blame them for the inevitable surge in infections and deaths. If they had just enforced our social distancing measures.
Kids have the attention spans of Donald Trump listening to a briefing while Fox News is on in the background. People who expect them to social distance and to wear their masks consistently just don’t know kids. And only the most draconian discipline will change that.
And, at any rate, the infection rate is much, much higher among children and teens than most people seem to think it is, and simply being in those enclosed spaces (the Covid-19 Exposure Chambers previously known as classrooms) will be sufficient to bring about utter disaster such as the world has not yet seen with this virus.
Let’s show the world just how ignorant we can be. Not only did we elect Donald Trump, but we reopened schools in the middle of a pandemic surge and in complete ignorance of the actual rate of infection among children and teens and of the consequences for children and teens of infection.
See tomorrow’s news stories about this.
Reopening schools now is INSANE.
Donald Trump has an attention span that is a lot less than most kids and maybe worse. When I was still teaching, I could keep most of my kids focused for at least 15 to 20 minutes on one task before I switched to another task to capture that attention back. I layered my lessons using different approaches and methods on the same subject. Most of the time it worked.
Trump’s attention span is measured in seconds, not minutes.
“Stated less diplomatically, the message teachers are getting from on high is: “Even though fully reopening schools while COVID-19 numbers are spiking is dangerous and unrealistic, just make it happen.”
Ain’t it the truth?! Higher-ups subscribe to the Nike motto: “Just Do It.”
Ullman’s nutshell of 30 yrs’ contradictory messaging to pubsch teachers is priceless & should be read by all. Thanks for making this EdWeek content available to non-subscribers.
Thank you, Diane, for providing these posts about the reopening question. So important!
Good afternoon Diane and everyone,
Why do we want schools to reopen in person? Some say that parents need to get back to work. Where? What jobs? Go back to their old job? What if that place of work is not open or no longer exists? What if that place of work is not hiring because it doesn’t need as many workers? Ok. That’s the first issue.
Second problem. What kind of school environment do you want to be available for your children? Do you want them to be constantly aware and stressed due to the safety of their environment? Can students learn when they repeatedly have health checks during the day? Can they learn as they are watching their environment being cleaned during the day? What about having to deal with all the other logistical situations that will be taking place? I don’t know. Maybe this won’t be stressful for them. I know I’m thinking about what my state of mind at school will be as a teacher who has to not only take care of my health but also teach a subject. That’s stressful enough. I can see a lot of discussion about this situation taking place in the first weeks of school and pretty much no learning taking place. What will the learning environment be if schools open in person? Think of all teachers and students masked and distancing. I imagine teachers won’t be collecting many student papers. Students may have to be sitting in front of the teacher and doing all their work online. Teachers won’t circulate around the class to help students. Curriculum may have to be modified. School will not look like it did in the past and the question is will this environment be better than students learning at home?
Third, there is much talk about social isolation and that kids need to be with their friends. Kids may have to be with the same group of students for the entire year or at the very least, have the number of people they associate with severely restricted. They are not going to be able to sit with friends at lunch, see teachers after school, play sports and participate in clubs with friends. It’s not just about reopening schools and having things be as they were in the past or even having the environment be different which it most surely will. It’s about what this school environment will look like and if it will be conducive to learning and the health of the people who go there. And, as I said, will this environment be better than online learning at home? Thank you.
Great post, Mamie. Especially on questioning “so parents can go back to work”– that often-unspoken & danced-around subtext of all “schools must open in-person now” pronouncements. If politicians could just name the need in plain words, it might spur locals to collaborate on addressing it. The need is for childcare that permits that second (or single) parent to resume or find onsite work. And that’s not everyone. Those who can work from home should do so, & free up bldg space for kids of parents who can’t. Those who can work from home are obviously better-equipped to help their kids negotiate online learning. As you note, those whose skillsets are limited to onsite work may not even have a site to “go back” to, but they’re going to need childcare while pounding the pavements trying to find something.
“Clearly, the German model is less disruptive.”
You were expecting different? (to be read in strong Yiddish accent 😂)
But seriously, this is just one of many issues now and in the coming years that will underscore the complete loss of American stature and credibility.
Indeed, Greg.
The US is now unique. Any ‘successful’ model (S. Korea? New Zealand? Finland? Even Germany) is now beyond reach. We can only try to avoid the mistakes of others, which are now becoming apparent. Israel opened schools (controlled and supposedly safely) and the result was: https://www.thedailybeast.com/israeli-data-show-school-openings-were-a-disaster-that-wiped-out-lockdown-gains
Yet, these ‘decisions’ in the US are being reached by people with no interest in foreign input and no expertise in epidemiology (or any science, for that matter).
The ‘Age of Reason’ built our country. We now live in the ‘Age of Flim-Flam’ and it’s tearing our civilization to shreds.
What happened yesterday at Lowe’s Home Improvement Center might reveal why the virus is spreading in California and other states.
Since Trump politicized the virus by not wearing a mask and holding rallies with no safety rules and the Republican Party joined him as a co-con-conspirator, too many Trumpists are refusing to wear masks claiming it takes away their freedom of choice, stupid, selfish fools!
Yesterday morning before 9 AM, I went to the local Lowe’s to buy supplies for the wood bunk bed project I’m working on. This Lowe’s is where I have been buying most of my wood and other supplies since I started this project back in late March. Before yesterday, I never saw anyone working or shopping in the big store without a mask on. Sure, I saw stupid customers with their noses exposed and only their mouths covered and it was easy to keep my distance and avoid them, but the employees had masks on covering their mouths and noses.
Not yesterday.
It is apparent that things are changing dramatically, and I blame murdering Trump and the GOP for what I witnessed. As I moved through the huge warehouse-sized Lowe’s, I became aware of employees and customers with masks, without masks, and some with noses exposed. I saw two management types walking down an aisle without masks on or even hanging from their necks.
When I stopped in the area where Lowe’s sells tools to buy another pair of saw horses, I had a question and there was an employee with his back turned to me in the next aisle. He was busy stocking a shelf area. I asked the question and he quickly moved into my aisle. It wasn’t until he was right beside me that I saw he wasn’t wearing his mask. It was hanging around his neck and now he was less than three feet from me. I was wearing my mask and had lightly tinted dark glasses that offer some protection for my eyes.
I eased away from him and then left.
As I continued shopping, my shock grew. I’d turn into aisles and was confronted by other shoppers and employees not wearing masks. To get past them, I’d have to be a lot closer than six feet. I turned around to avoid them and find another way to the aisle that had what I wanted.
Now I am on the five to ten-day clock again to find out if I was infected, and I think the odds are a lot higher this time. I do not think I will be shopping in that Lowe’s or any Lowe’s again.
Next time, I will call ahead to a lumber yard instead of a store like Lowe’s and ask if they enforce wearing masks. If no one is enforcing the mask rules, then I’ll see if Amazon sells what I’m looking for and have the supplies delivered. I wonder if Amazon sells lumber, too.
You would think businesses would understand how many more customers would patronize their business if they consistently enforced the mask rule. If people don’t feel safe in your business, you are going to lose business.
As much as I understand ordering from Amazon, I really don’t like how Amazon is profiting from this.
For me, it is an easy choice when it comes down to ordering from Amazon or risking my life and/or the lives of others shopping in brick-and-mortar stores that are not enforcing the rules of the mask.
After all, I cannot spend money when I’m dead.
Corporations are making decisions because there is no leadership from the top. Each state governor, each city mayor, each corporation CEO decides what to do. What a total mess.
…………………………………………
Walmart’s nationwide mandate could prove a watershed moment in the mask debate.
There is already evidence that the announcement by the nation’s biggest employer — a retail staple of rural and exurban Republican strongholds — is turning the tide on what had become another front in a toxic partisan fight.
Hours after Walmart made its announcement, supermarket chain Kroger said it is following suit with a nationwide rule for shoppers in its stores that will take effect next week. Kohl’s, too, announced it will require shoppers to mask up in its 1,100 nationwide starting Monday.
And the National Retail Federation piggybacked on the Walmart announcement to encourage all retailers to adopt the policy, saying it hoped the news proves to be a “tipping point” on the matter. “Workers serving customers should not have to make a critical decision as to whether they should risk exposure to infection or lose their jobs because a minority of people refuse to wear masks in order to help stop the spread of the deadly coronavirus,” the trade association said in its statement.
General counsel for the federation, Stephanie Martz, suggested that Walmart’s market and cultural pull could have an outsize impact. “The more stores that are able to make announcements like this, the more it will help move the needle culturally and make it accepted that this is what you do when you shop in an enclosed space,” she said. “The fact that this has become politicized is really disappointing.”
Target, CVS the latest businesses to announce mask requirement
Target’s policy will go into effect Aug. 1. Its stores will hand out masks at entrances to those who need them
Completely agree with you Lloyd – I am ordering online too.
It was just an aside about Amazon.
I understand. Before the pandemic, I’d give the brick-and-mortar stores a chance to buy what I wanted. If I couldn’t find the item, then I’d turn to Amazon 2nd.
I have had precisely the same experiences at my local Lowe’s and Home Depot. (I even made a comment about this the other day on Diane’s post about how the Idiot may be inadvertently changing our views about racism). Hardware stores are a microcosm of all that is wrong with our nonresponse to COVID. And how about this video:
https://crooksandliars.com/2020/07/huntington-beach
Watching that video triggered my PTSD/ I started thinking about setting up a sniper’s post so I could start ridding the world of some really stupid and dangerous people.
GregB: How interesting that the first lady didn’t want a mask but asked these two fellows if they knew where they were going when they died. Sounds like the Evangelical/Catholic BS that Trump pushes. The CHOSEN ONE influences people to not follow science. Dying early is a choice that they want to make.
“I live here.’ is a great reason to not wear a mask.
I agree, Carol. I have had it up to the proverbial “here” with people who justify their actions today based on the certainty of some notion what a supposed afterlife is supposed to represent.
Our lowes generally has most employees masked (including one of my old students, who is the manager, he said proudly). Still, they have not joined in the attempt to mask every customer except to broadcast the need to social distance protocol. I generally go very early in the morning.
I too do all my chores early in the morning, especially grocery shopping. Which is tough, because I am NOT a morning person! The few times I do things late in the day are not comforting.
Me too. Generally, I go very early in the morning for all my shopping. and this trip was no different. I left the house before 7 AM but went to ACE first to buy the sawhorses there. They were out.
Then I went to Home Depot to look at their sawhorses. Except for the fanciest most expensive one that cost more than six times the price, they were out of the one I was interested in.
Then I went to Harbor Freight to look at their sawhorses. Cheap and flimsy looking. No way.
My fourth stop was Lowe’s and by then it was after 0800.
The NYSED just issued its guidelines for reopening. It offers broad suggestions, and it looks at though the “how to implement” will be left up to the individual schools. Districts and schools are required to submit a plan to the SED by July 31st.http://www.nysed.gov/news/2020/state-education-department-issues-guidance-reopen-new-york-state-schools
Don a Mask, Mr. Trump. It Won’t Kill You to Do It; It’ll Kill Thousands More If You Don’t
JULY 16, 2020
by Amy Goodman and Denis Moynihan
President Donald Trump broke the law Wednesday, landing at Hartsfield Jackson Atlanta International Airport and greeting people without wearing a mask. Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms told MSNBC, “Donald Trump is actually violating the law, as he stands on our tarmac without a mask.” The Mayor, her husband and one of their children are at home, diagnosed with COVID-19. Trump’s dismissal of masks defines his misrule, driving the public health catastrophe raging across the United States.
Trump’s pandemic response has been cynical and deadly. While predicting that the pandemic will just “go away,” he has failed to set an example by simply wearing a mask. He and his partisan disciples, like Florida Governor Ron DeSantis, Texas Governor Greg Abbot and Arizona Governor Doug Ducey, all proudly reject common sense steps that would save lives. Georgia’s Republican Governor Brian Kemp nullified local mask mandates by executive order late Wednesday. Thanks to Trump, America is now unquestionably number one in the world — number one, that is, in the number of COVID-19 infections and deaths, with no end in sight…
Dr. Ali Khan is an epidemiologist at the University of Nebraska, formerly, at the CDC, in charge of the strategic national stockpile of emergency medical supplies. “I believe all of government has blood on their hands — 136,000 deaths, preventable deaths, a tragedy,” he said on the Democracy Now! news hour.
“In countries that were successful, each and every politician, regardless of their party, followed the science,” he continued. “Everybody said, ‘Wear masks.’ No controversy. Everybody wore a mask. They got their disease under control. We need to see that again right now at every political level — local, state, national. We need everybody to be wearing a mask.”…
https://www.democracynow.org/2020/7/16/don_a_mask_mr_trump_it
Every western country has opened schools…. science should not stand in the way of schools opening ~ Kayleigh McEnay.
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/live/2020/jul/16/coronavirus-us-covid-donald-trump-anthony-fauci-joe-biden-live-updates
This international roundup pays no attention to the fact that covid is raging here in most states, while the countries cited waited until the virus was under control, then ramped up slowly [except Israel, which jumped to full-on reopening & has had to retrench in wake of immediate, roaring spike). Apples and oranges.
The only remotely relatable bit I gleaned was the sensible advice to organize in-person students in non-mixing “bubbles,” in order to minimize the number of students/ staff reqd to shut down/ quarantine when infections crop u
Trump keeps saying that everybody who wants a test can get a test.
So far, we have tested only 0.14 percent of the U.S. population, and very, very few of those tests have been of children and teens. Now that we are testing a tiny bit more, we are seeing enormous surges in rates of positives among both children and teens. And as we gather more data on the disease itself, we are learning that both symptomatic and overtly asymptomatic people infected with this virus can suffer severe long-term consequences.
Talking about “safely reopening schools” under these conditions is crazy. Completely irresponsible. Stupid. Extraordinarily dangerous.
I mistyped my figure, above. We have tested only 1.4 percent of the U.S. population.
Oops. Wrong again. It’s about 14 percent now. I shouldn’t do this stuff when I am waking up. LOL.
It was just reported (NPR) That Central African Republic was only capable of testing 200 people a day. This most certainly “hides a major health problem” in the country.
Testing, tracing, and mask wearing seem to be our only ways to get through the covid with any success, medically or economically.
Gov. Holcomb [R-IN] wants Indiana to open up its schools. The state health commissioner is saying that the number of COVID-19 cases in Indiana are surging. Indiana is at the bottom of the U.S. in funding for its schools. This is a disaster waiting to happen.
Statewide testing lags goals set for level, speed…Indiana
Associated Press
INDIANAPOLIS – Indiana’s state-sponsored coronavirus testing program has not been meeting the levels of testing or the speed of results that were touted when it was started in May…
State contractor OptumServe Health Services was expected to have 50 testing sites operating around Indiana by the end of May, providing 100,000 free tests a month and providing results within an average of 48 hours, state officials said.
The state health commissioner, Dr. Kristina Box, said Wednesday that the company had 35 testing sites open, with results averaging 59 hours and sometimes up to 80 hours to become available. The program’s online registration site warns that it could take four to six days for results.
Box blamed the slower-than-expected results on a national increase in demand for test processing and supplies as the number of COVID-19 cases has surged in Indiana and other states, many of which aggressively lifted virus restrictions to reopen their economies.
“These are external factors that are beyond our control,” Box said.
OptumServe, which is a division of insurance giant UnitedHealth Group, has closed some testing sites because they were located in schools that are now preparing to reopen for students or were in locations with no air conditioning during recent hot weather, Box said.
The company has performed about 102,000 tests for the public at its sites, she said. That means OptumServe has just recently passed the 100,000 test mark that it had been expected to reach in May.
Brian Dixon, a professor at Indiana University’s Fairbanks School of Public Health, said he worries that the testing troubles will hurt the state’s ability to slow the spread of the coronavirus…
https://journalgazette.net/news/local/indiana/20200717/statewide-testing-lags-goals-set-for-level-speed
Ada County is Boise, Meridian and Garden City. Ada County is a current hot spot for the state. Governor Little [R-ID] wants schools to open. I went to public schools in West Ada County schools.
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ANALYSIS: THE DISCONNECT BETWEEN THE REALITIES AND THE RHETORIC OF REOPENING
Kevin Richert
07/16/2020
…When Idaho Education News’ Clark Corbin asked Little if Boise or West Ada schools could open, based on the current surge in cases in Ada County, the governor called the question a “hypothetical.”
It won’t be a hypothetical question a month from today when Boise schools open Aug. 17.
And here’s a cold set of facts that isn’t the least bit hypothetical. On June 17, when Little unveiled his school reopening committee, Idaho had 3,654 confirmed or probable coronavirus cases. On Wednesday — after the state and the health districts reported yet another one-day spike in new cases — the number stood at 12,579.
Trends can change between now and the first day of school. No one is rooting against that. But right now, Little is on the wrong side of some dreadful numbers.
And maybe on the wrong side of the debate. We’ve already seen it happen. As the state counted up its first few coronavirus cases, Little hopped on a March 15 conference call with school administrators. He encouraged them to keep their buildings open, citing Centers for Disease Control guidelines that cautioned against closing down too early in an outbreak…
But Little, State Board members and state superintendent Sherri Ybarra have long touted the virtues of parental choice. We’ll soon see what choice looks like during a pandemic.
If Idahoans are thinking like the rest of the nation, as case numbers swell across a wide swath of states, an exodus from brick-and-mortar school appears possible. According to an Axios-Ipsos poll released Tuesday, 71 percent of respondents said they considered fall classes moderately or highly risky (a strong majority, even allowing for its 7 percent margin for error)….
“https://www.idahoednews.org/news/analysis-the-disconnect-between-the-realities-and-the-rhetoric-of-reopening/” />
For what it’s worth, Idaho is at the bottom of funding for schools. I think its near the bottom nest to Utah.
Another disaster waiting to happen.
Another day, another record coronavirus count for Idaho as confirmed cases surpass 12,000
Since July 1, 21 Idahoans have lost their lives to the virus. The case fatality rate stands at 0.86%.
Whether to open schools or not is a good example of damned if we do and damned if we don’t.
Here’s a thoughtful post from The Nation. The author is a pediatrician and public health advocate.
“The wealth gap between the richest and poorest families has more than doubled since 1989. And the top 1 percent of earners now hold more wealth than the bottom 80 percent. This chasm constrains the mobility of nearly every American, including kids. And it isn’t color-blind. A recent study found that for every dollar of wealth held by a household with white children, households with Black children have just one penny.
“Current debates about reopening schools must be placed in this context, because they illuminate broader and longer fights to remedy racially apportioned access to mobility, and thus longevity, in this country. For example, efforts to meet the basic needs of neighborhoods dogged by residential segregation, job losses, and other forms of what scholar Ruth Wilson Gilmore calls ‘organized abandonment and organized violence’ have long used schools as a back door to resources. This is because front doors to resources are too often barricaded by a crushing mix of austerity, racism, and violence. And so schools have become depots for food, health care, broadband Internet service, and accessible services for kids with special needs. They have also become critical sanctuaries to protect children from domestic violence and child abuse.
“In this way, public education—like public health, utilities, and public spaces—has become a critical terrain of struggle for greater equality in the United States. And decades of efforts have used public schools, as both a mechanism and a physical site, to expand access to safety net supports and protections—for kids, their families, and communities.”
https://www.thenation.com/article/society/school-open-safety-coronavirus/
Here is a challenge for all the covidiot tRumptrain cultistas who demand that the schools open without ALL CDC and WHO guidelines/precautions being adhered to:
Sign the Irrevocable Binding Pledge:
I,________________, will publicly commit seppuku or agree to be guillotined on the White House lawn when the first innocent childrens’ deaths and co-morbities obtain from the opening of schools without all of the proper health safeguards in place.
C’mon all of you oh so tough covidiots, sign the pledge.
The executions will be televised!
I volunteer to wear a mask and face shield while working the lever for the guillotine as long as the first four-guilty monsters are Donald Trump, his three adult children, and his son-in-unlawful.
The challenge will be getting them to sign the binding pledge and even if they did Trump and his family have a history of ignoring signed contracts of any kind while expecting everyone else to live up to them.
I just read this piece in the New Yorker…. it is long – but thought those who read this blog might find it worth reading. It’s a parent’s account of distance learning in Brooklyn and what he learned about education in the process.
https://www.newyorker.com/culture/personal-history/what-is-distance-learning-for?utm_source=nl&utm_brand=tny&utm_mailing=TNY_Daily_071720&utm_campaign=aud-dev&utm_medium=email&bxid=5be9ed3d3f92a404691b3462&cndid=39337302&hasha=739c24bfb1905d6fe22921e14663de41&hashb=51fbb157ecda03c18ad9cdf1da9a51de474a5b7b&hashc=9ed763f79729d727c63b2a1c154c09bd7d1086fcebf1cd277b85fc75c9bbaa1a&esrc=bounceX&utm_term=TNY_Daily
Thank you for the link – this was a really interesting article. I wonder what school his kid attended pre-k — the author writes: “The reputation of Raffi’s school is that it is too strict and academic.” But it seems to be a public school and not a charter.
It is clear that for pre-k and a fair number of years after pre-k, any notion of virtual school is really nonsense. It will be parents or caregivers “teaching” students. I wonder if one answer is to re-open face to face schools for the very youngest students, and they can be spread out over more buildings.
If virtual learning is going to be remote for all, the DOE may be using resources better if they produce some great videos a la “The Electric Company” for kids to watch each day, and distribute many of those early childhood teachers to help teach smaller groups of older students. The videos can include singing with music teachers and activities with movement teachers.
I posted this before, but I would really like to hear some ideas from teachers (from early grades to high school) of ideas to re-imagine the structure of remote education. The union should be doing this, regardless of whether anyone is asking their opinion, because there is nothing stopping them from presenting their vision to the parents. I don’t mean what any individual teacher would do, but the whole school or whole district approach to what the experience is.
Here is ‘news’ from the WH. In my opinion, McEnany still is blabbering nonsense. Nonsense can’t be made into truth no matter how many times one tries. [“Follow the science. Open our schools.” Yep. Much clearer now.]
………………………….
Media are just plain lying about Kayleigh McEnany ‘science’ quote
July 16, 2020 05:01 PM
It has been said before, but it bears repeating: You are better off watching raw footage of the White House press briefings than trusting the word of journalists.
Put more simply, members of our vaunted Fourth Estate cannot be trusted to report accurately on this administration. They are just making stuff up at this point.
White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany on Wednesday tried to explain President Trump’s position that schools in the United States should reopen sooner rather than later.
“The president has said, unmistakably, that he wants schools to open. And I was just in the Oval [Office] talking to him about that. And when he says ‘open,’ he means ‘open in full’ — kids being able to attend each and every day at their school,” she told reporters at a White House press briefing.
“The science should not stand in the way of this,” McEnany continued. “And as Dr. Scott Atlassaid — I thought this was a good quote — ‘Of course we can do it. Everyone else in the Western world, our peer nations, are doing it. We are the outlier here.’ The science is very clear on this — that, you know, for instance, you look at the [Journal of the American Medical Association’s] pediatric study of 46 pediatric hospitals in North America that said the risk of critical illness from COVID is far less for children than that of seasonal flu.”
The White House press secretary concluded, “The science is on our side here. We encourage for localities and states to just simply follow the science. Open our schools.”…
https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/opinion/media-are-just-plain-lying-about-kayleigh-mcenany-science-quote
How Trump Closed Down the Schools
The president is demanding that classes resume this fall—but his own failures are forcing districts to shut their doors.
This article was updated on July 17 at 2:45pm
…Instead of uniting Americans behind the project of reopening schools, restoring the most important service that has not returned since the start of the pandemic, the Trump administration has politicized the debate. It is asking districts to solve problems—testing, tracing, community spread—that every other level of government has thus far failed to solve, but not providing funding to do so. In fact, Trump is threatening to cut funding to school districts that do not reopen…
After initially offering a strong endorsement of students returning to classrooms, the American Academy of Pediatrics last week issued a more equivocal statement. “We should leave it to health experts to tell us when the time is best to open up school buildings, and listen to educators and administrators to shape how we do it,” the group said in a joint statement with the American Federation of Teachers, the National Education Association, and the School Superintendents Association. The World Health Organization has suggested that schools remain closed as long as the rate of community transmission is above 5 percent…
“If the virus is exploding in the community, there is no way you’re going to be able to do school in person,” says Tom Frieden, who led the CDC from 2009 to 2017…
Read More:
https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2020/07/why-schools-cant-fully-reopen-fall/614353/?utm_source=atl&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=share
WH philosophy: Only people who want schools to open can testify at Congressional hearing. CDC might give out information that is too restrictive. Opening schools is the only way to get the economy moving so that Trump can be re-elected.
………………………………………………………………..
White House Won’t Let CDC Testify in Congressional Hearing on Schools Reopening
Pilar Melendez
Reporter
Erin Banco
National Security Reporter
Updated
Jul. 17, 2020
3:39PM ET
The White House has blocked CDC officials from testifying in a House Education and Labor Committee hearing scheduled next week on reopening schools, a senior CDC official confirmed to The Daily Beast. The committee’s chair, Rep. Bobby Scott (D-VA), had invited CDC Director Robert Redfield last week to testify on July 23 to discuss “the immediate needs of K-12 public schools to safely reopening.” But, at the direction of the White House, Redfield won’t attend.
In a statement to Politico, Scott called the move “alarming” and said it came at a time “when [the CDC’s] expertise and guidance is so critical to the health and safety of students, parents, and educators.” He said the White House had done a disservice “to the many communities across the country facing difficult decisions about reopening schools this fall” and had prioritized politics over science.
Read it at Committee on Education and Labor
Trump doesn’t care how many people he murders.
He only cares about being re-elected.
He already knows the death count will soar when kids go back to school and that explains why he stopped the CDC from reporting COVID-19 deaths and had some of his corrupt toadies take over hiding and manipulating that data.
Trump’s ego is telling him he can cover up what is really happening long enough so he will gain voters and win in November. That is why he keeps repeating that the U.S. has a low growth and death rate from the virus. Tell a lie enough and it becomes the truth. That is how he thinks.
Trump is a murderer, because he has actively encouraged people to fight against the measures that would curb the virus. He saluted Gov Kemp of Georgia to open his state too soon. He tweeted to armed protestors encouraging them to LIBERATE MICHIGAN and other states. He refuses to wear a mask. He belittles those who do. He has held rallies where his supporters did not wear masks and did not social distance. He has murdered people by his actions and inaction. Will senior citizens continue to support him and vote for him as he ignores their vulnerability?
Shield and Brooks on Trump’s declining support. They point out that Trump is losing support across the board.
How far down do they think COVID-19 infections will go down in two weeks?
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IPS [Indianapolis Public Schools] delays school start due to COVID-19 concerns
By Eric Weddle Jul 18, 2020, 2:01pm EDT
WFYI News, eweddle@wfyi.org
The reopening of Indianapolis Public Schools is delayed for two weeks in response to the rising trend of COVID-19 infections in the community.
In-person classes and remote learning will now begin on Aug. 17, instead of the previously planned Aug. 3 start. Families can also reconsider whether they want full-time virtual learning when school starts — the original deadline to register was last night.
The IPS Board of Commissioners unanimously approved the delay Saturday during its summer retreat — a public meeting held at the Central Library.
Superintendent Aleeisa Johnson described the delay as the right move for Marion County as the COVID-19 infection rate increases.
The county’s most recent average infection rate climbed to 7.1% over a seven day average. In mid-June the average infection rate was was 5.4%.
“As I’ve acknowledged all along, this is a fluid situation and we will remain flexible,” Johnson said in a message to families. “My job as superintendent is to look at all of the data from state and local health and government officials to make the best decision for our students and staff about the new school year.
Student sports will also be “paused” during until Aug. 17, Johnson said.
Compensation for teachers and other staff will not be impacted by the delay, Johnson said.
“The decision to delay the opening of school by two weeks gives our community more time to ensure we are turning the tide on the number of positive COVID-19 cases and confirm we are doing the right thing,” Johnson said.
IPS now joins other city and neighboring school district opting to delay the start of school. Wayne Township Schools in Marion County and Hamilton Southeastern Schools in Hamilton County both delayed their restart plans.
“What an extremely complex decision this is. There is no right and wrong,” said board commissioner Diane Arnold. “There are pluses and minuses for every consideration.”
This story was originally published by wfyi.org
WaPo:
A study from South Korea could bolster those who argue reopening classrooms in much of the United States is too risky, suggesting that, while children under 10 years old are less likely to spread the coronavirus, young people between 10 and 19 years old will spread it similarly to adults.
How Does COVID-19 Affect Kids? Science Has Answers and Gaps
From U.S.News & World Report:
The CDC says 175,374 cases have been confirmed in kids aged 17 and under as of Friday, accounting for roughly 6% of all confirmed cases. The number of kids who have been infected but not confirmed is almost certainly far higher than that though, experts say, because those with mild or no symptoms are less likely to get tested.
The CDC says 228 children and teens through age 17 have died from the disease in the U.S. as of Thursday, about 0.2% of the more than 138,000 Americans who have died in all.
https://www.usnews.com/news/health-news/articles/2020-07-17/how-does-covid-19-affect-kids-science-has-answers-and-gaps
CPS [Chicago Public Schools] proposes hybrid of online and in-person classes for fall; CTU calls plan ‘rushed and incomplete’
SATURDAY, JUL 18
Chicago Public Schools released a much-anticipated blueprint for fall instruction, saying it plans to adopt a hybrid-learning model that will bring most students back for two consecutive days of in-person classes on a rotating basis if public health officials agree it can be done safely during the coronavirus pandemic.
Nothing in the framework is finalized, but it’s already eliciting opposition from the Chicago Teachers Union, whose vice president called it a “rushed and incomplete plan.” The union has been adamant that schools should remain virtual in the fall.