Stat Monitor Repairman said:
Wedding insurance is like hurricane insurance. You can't buy when storm in gulf.
Fair point!
Stat Monitor Repairman said:
Wedding insurance is like hurricane insurance. You can't buy when storm in gulf.
dbryanc87 said:
I'm getting married in Spring on March 28. 147 people RSVP'd yes. Should I be getting nervous about being able to still have it? Is wedding "insurance" a thing? TIA
You're very likely not having a normal wedding on March 28...that should be your expectation imo.dbryanc87 said:
I'm getting married in Spring on March 28. 147 people RSVP'd yes. Should I be getting nervous about being able to still have it? Is wedding "insurance" a thing? TIA
Yes, but they need to not happen all at once.Quote:
Stop messing around with testing and treat the worst cases
I would suggest not having any of your elderly family attend.dbryanc87 said:
I'm getting married in Spring on March 28. 147 people RSVP'd yes. Should I be getting nervous about being able to still have it? Is wedding "insurance" a thing? TIA
tommyjohn said:
Most ISDs are on spring break this week. CISD said they would update Friday and I am not expecting my kids to be going back to school next week. I am assuming most others will be the same. After that we can expect the companies to follow suit.
Holy crud that is funny! "We all gonna die anyways"....but she put all those garbage bags on herself??? Awesome!Cromagnum said:
When coronavirus gets to the 5th ward
BBRex said:tommyjohn said:
Most ISDs are on spring break this week. CISD said they would update Friday and I am not expecting my kids to be going back to school next week. I am assuming most others will be the same. After that we can expect the companies to follow suit.
In the Houston area, most districts look to HISD to make a call, then follow suit after conferring together and waiting long enough to make it look like they didn't just copy them. HISD has spring break next week, so I would expect them to push through this week then wait out spring break to make a call. That makes quick action for the smaller area districts a lot less likely, but not impossible.
Our next door neighbors are on a cruise out of Miami. They return to port this Sunday, then catch a flight back home. We will be avoiding them like the plague.Willy Wonka said:
Even in My circle in our little school we've got folks in Israel, Disneyland, Disney world, Universal, NYC.
You think there's any positive cases running around any of those?
jenn96 said:BBRex said:tommyjohn said:
Most ISDs are on spring break this week. CISD said they would update Friday and I am not expecting my kids to be going back to school next week. I am assuming most others will be the same. After that we can expect the companies to follow suit.
In the Houston area, most districts look to HISD to make a call, then follow suit after conferring together and waiting long enough to make it look like they didn't just copy them. HISD has spring break next week, so I would expect them to push through this week then wait out spring break to make a call. That makes quick action for the smaller area districts a lot less likely, but not impossible.
I'll be astonished if Cy Fair goes back on Monday with all the crazy that's dropped in the last 24 hours.
BBRex said:tommyjohn said:
Most ISDs are on spring break this week. CISD said they would update Friday and I am not expecting my kids to be going back to school next week. I am assuming most others will be the same. After that we can expect the companies to follow suit.
In the Houston area, most districts look to HISD to make a call, then follow suit after conferring together and waiting long enough to make it look like they didn't just copy them. HISD has spring break next week, so I would expect them to push through this week then wait out spring break to make a call. That makes quick action for the smaller area districts a lot less likely, but not impossible.
What has dropped? 0.00000002% of the greater Houston population has possibly contracted a virus that has a survival rate of 99%.jenn96 said:BBRex said:tommyjohn said:
Most ISDs are on spring break this week. CISD said they would update Friday and I am not expecting my kids to be going back to school next week. I am assuming most others will be the same. After that we can expect the companies to follow suit.
In the Houston area, most districts look to HISD to make a call, then follow suit after conferring together and waiting long enough to make it look like they didn't just copy them. HISD has spring break next week, so I would expect them to push through this week then wait out spring break to make a call. That makes quick action for the smaller area districts a lot less likely, but not impossible.
I'll be astonished if Cy Fair goes back on Monday with all the crazy that's dropped in the last 24 hours.
What happened in the last 24 hours?jenn96 said:BBRex said:tommyjohn said:
Most ISDs are on spring break this week. CISD said they would update Friday and I am not expecting my kids to be going back to school next week. I am assuming most others will be the same. After that we can expect the companies to follow suit.
In the Houston area, most districts look to HISD to make a call, then follow suit after conferring together and waiting long enough to make it look like they didn't just copy them. HISD has spring break next week, so I would expect them to push through this week then wait out spring break to make a call. That makes quick action for the smaller area districts a lot less likely, but not impossible.
I'll be astonished if Cy Fair goes back on Monday with all the crazy that's dropped in the last 24 hours.
The northern, suburban districts do not follow HISD - HISD cancels for pretty much anything. CISD, CFISD, TISD all follow each other's lead. It is very rare for one of the three to cancel and not the other two. With the 2 cases in Montgomery County and 2 in NW Harris County, I would expect an extension of Spring Break, but they will wait until the last minute to make the call.BBRex said:tommyjohn said:
Most ISDs are on spring break this week. CISD said they would update Friday and I am not expecting my kids to be going back to school next week. I am assuming most others will be the same. After that we can expect the companies to follow suit.
In the Houston area, most districts look to HISD to make a call, then follow suit after conferring together and waiting long enough to make it look like they didn't just copy them. HISD has spring break next week, so I would expect them to push through this week then wait out spring break to make a call. That makes quick action for the smaller area districts a lot less likely, but not impossible.
Katy ISD has always waited for HISD to make an announcement as far as closures go before making any decisions themselves. All the staff has known that for years.chimpanzee said:BBRex said:tommyjohn said:
Most ISDs are on spring break this week. CISD said they would update Friday and I am not expecting my kids to be going back to school next week. I am assuming most others will be the same. After that we can expect the companies to follow suit.
In the Houston area, most districts look to HISD to make a call, then follow suit after conferring together and waiting long enough to make it look like they didn't just copy them. HISD has spring break next week, so I would expect them to push through this week then wait out spring break to make a call. That makes quick action for the smaller area districts a lot less likely, but not impossible.
I get that they're the largest, but following HISD's lead on anything at this point sounds like a recipe for a federal indictment.
You might want to check and see if they will cover "pandemics" if so it will be well worth the money.dbryanc87 said:
I'm getting married in Spring on March 28. 147 people RSVP'd yes. Should I be getting nervous about being able to still have it? Is wedding "insurance" a thing? TIA
Pay me $1MM premium and I'll insure your wedding that will take place in two weeks.case04 said:You might want to check and see if they will cover "pandemics" if so it will be well worth the money.dbryanc87 said:
I'm getting married in Spring on March 28. 147 people RSVP'd yes. Should I be getting nervous about being able to still have it? Is wedding "insurance" a thing? TIA
Ducks4brkfast said:
Expect the ISDs rolling off spring break this week to cancel classes soon.
Ducks4brkfast said:Our next door neighbors are on a cruise out of Miami. They return to port this Sunday, then catch a flight back home. We will be avoiding themWilly Wonka said:
Even in My circle in our little school we've got folks in Israel, Disneyland, Disney world, Universal, NYC.
You think there's any positive cases running around any of those?likeas the plague.
Quote:
Dear CFISD community,
As you are aware, the situation regarding COVID-19 continues to be very fluid for the Greater Houston area. I want to assure you that despite our schools being closed for spring break, the CFISD administrative team is participating in daily calls with local, state and federal officials and is actively monitoring the situation.
I am attending a meeting on Friday morning with neighboring superintendents and local officials and will have an update for you later that afternoon.
It takes all of us working together to ensure healthy learning environments.
Sincerely,
Mark Henry, Ed.D. Superintendent of Schools
Interested to hear more. They did cancel basically all non school essential activities as well as curtail most visitors, volunteers, meal delivery services. etc.DartAg1970 said:
I heard Spring Branch ISD board voted to close for 3 weeks after spring break. Can't confirm though.
We are LITERALLY (and I use the word correctly) going to overwhelm a health care system because our nation's flagship city has hundreds of thousands of children whose parents are unable to feed them.Gator03 said:
Apparently we live in a society where many parents are unable to provide even the basics for their children. From a NYTimes article on NY schools:https://www.nytimes.com/2020/03/07/nyregion/nyc-schools-coronavirus.htmlQuote:
New York City has the largest public school system in the United States, a vast district with about 750,000 children who are poor, including around 114,000 who are homeless.
For such students, school may be the only place they can get three hot meals a day and medical care, and even wash their dirty laundry.
Because of that:Quote:
That is why the city's public schools will probably stay open even if the new coronavirus becomes more widespread in New York. Richard A. Carranza, the schools chancellor, said earlier this week that he considered long-term closings an "extreme" measure and a "last resort."
Quote:
What happened in the last 24 hours?
94chem said:We are LITERALLY (and I use the word correctly) going to overwhelm a health care system because our nation's flagship city has hundreds of thousands of children whose parents are unable to feed them.Gator03 said:
Apparently we live in a society where many parents are unable to provide even the basics for their children. From a NYTimes article on NY schools:https://www.nytimes.com/2020/03/07/nyregion/nyc-schools-coronavirus.htmlQuote:
New York City has the largest public school system in the United States, a vast district with about 750,000 children who are poor, including around 114,000 who are homeless.
For such students, school may be the only place they can get three hot meals a day and medical care, and even wash their dirty laundry.
Because of that:Quote:
That is why the city's public schools will probably stay open even if the new coronavirus becomes more widespread in New York. Richard A. Carranza, the schools chancellor, said earlier this week that he considered long-term closings an "extreme" measure and a "last resort."
This is a disgrace on so many levels.
jenn96 said:Quote:
What happened in the last 24 hours?
You're joking, I assume? NBA season suspended, rodeo cancelled, NCAA tournaments cancelled, EU travel suspended, one of the most beloved and famous Hollywood actors and his wife test positive - perception-wise, it's off the rails. Plus more and more people are becoming cognizant of the benefits of flattening the curve and social distancing, and grasping that it's not the disease itself that's especially dangerous but the potential for health care system overload that we need to be proactive about.
Right now there are 7 or 8 hospitals per corona virus patient, and most if not all of the Houston cases were sent home to self quarantine and recover.Quote:
there are more than 85 hospitals in the Houston area with more than 19,300 beds, including those in TMC. These facilities employ more than 100,000 health care professionals, almost seven percent of the Houston-area workforce.