The more schools I see delaying in person attendance, and the more I think about it, the more frustrated I get. And angry.
I've been very understanding of worldwide decisions throughout this pandemic. It's a weird situation and we didn't have perfect information from the get go, around the world governments acted with caution in light of the unknown. I get that - be safe, father data, proceed with caution. Sure, in hindsight that can be picked apart now or ten years from now. But knowing what we knew, or didn't know, at the beginning it was all understandable to me.
We are now 6 months from initial breakout, four months since things got serious in the US. We have a lot of data on case counts, hospitalization rates, and fatalities. We know who is at risk and who has a risk equal to the flu or less than the flu (kids under 20). Overall, and to adults 50-65, it does appear the risk could be 3 times the flu. Since we tend to worry close to 0 about influenza in the workplace and schools, lets use 3*near zero for what we should be feeling - yet there seems to be fear of certain death of at least one teacher in a school.
I'm already digressing. We have had data for a while now, a lot of data at this point. I see people in essential business back at work and using precautions. Health care workers, police, fire, grocery stores, restaurants - you name it. Most businesses are open and operating with caution. Masks are required and people encouraged to social distance.
I see teens working in grocery stores, working in fast food. These are high school age and out working in buildings with coworkers and the public. I see kids in daycare. I see kids in summer camps. Kids are playing youth sports. All using precautions, but functioning in many non essential settings.
My wife is in health care and works directly with the elderly. She visits personal homes but also large skilled nursing or assisted living facilities. End of March, April - her work near zero. Places shut down to protect elderly, we got it. After 4, 5 weeks - patients regressing physically. Patients very depressed, even suicidal. These patients need treatments, or they have no quality of life. As a result, facilities and families opened the homes to allow the elderly to be treated. They are at some level
Of risk when health care employees visit, my wife and coworkers are also at risk when working hands on with patients in these facilities. However, it is deemed necessary and for the greater good of the patients.
These elderly patients are at MUCH MORE risk from the virus when compared to 18 and under youth. My wife and her coworkers are at equal risk as any group of educators, their ages run full gamut and they are working indoors and hands on with patients. It is deemed essential.
Yet, now we have kids not at risk of illness who are regressing. Not physically, but intellectually. Emotionally. Socially. And yet we can provide them the essential education - both found in books and among groups of peers - that they need?
The cluster **** of poor leadership, or lack of coordinated educational guidance, is ridiculous. They don't know what to do? They don't have PpE? They think teachers and kids are guaranteed to die? Have they not been living this with the rest of us? I could put together a reasonable plan, at least fit for review and critique, that's seems far advanced to these school districts just saying "there's and outbreak and we aren't ready so we'll keep
Watching". Watching to what end? What is their plan? If no plan now, how in 6 weeks?
This is unacceptable, do your job. Educate the kids. Like every other ****ing business allowed to operate, out procedures and plans in place and execute. Like other countries who seem to be able to pull off education of their youth even in current environment.
Sorry for the rant, I've not been this frustrated since this all started.