Several school districts in Florida are outright defying GOP Gov. Ron DeSantis's executive order to remain silent on COVID-19 infections among schoolchildren as parents, teachers, and school administrators realize they could never keep this under wraps.
Florida school districts are defying Gov. Ron DeSantis and publicly reporting new Covid-19 cases among students and staff that the state government considers confidential.
The state Department of Health has tried to directly quash reporting on the virus in some instances, after DeSantis said K-12 testing data “needs to be put in the right context.”
With no statewide standard, local leaders are left to decide on their own how and when to report Covid-19 cases in their districts. The result is a mix of differing daily and weekly reports and digital dashboards at school districts across Florida, with some counties not reporting any data to the general public.
In Bay County, for instance, school officials are aiming to produce three coronavirus reports a week. The district initially held off reporting anything to parents and the community as it watched the Department of Health’s response to counties that had built online dashboards to track the virus.
“We don’t want to get into any trouble, but we think transparency is the best way to go,” Bay County Superintendent Bill Husfelt said in an interview.
In a message to his school district, Husfelt noted that the Department of Health had asked some districts to take down their Covid-19 dashboards. In northeast Florida, Flagler County said the state forbid its local health department to release coronavirus data tied to schools. The DeSantis administration delivered a similar message to other counties, leading the state’s largest teachers union to blast the Republican governor in ads airing in Orlando and Tampa.
The state and local showdown over coronavirus messaging is the latest example of how state health officials have aided in the Republican governor’s plan to keep schools open during the pandemic. The state health department was “notably absent” when local school boards sought advice for closing classrooms during the pandemic, essentially forcing them to reopen, a circuit court judge wrote in an Aug. 24 ruling.
DeSantis and the Florida Education Association, a teachers union, have tangled in court over the state’s hardline school reopening policy. About 1.6 million students have returned to school for in person classes, while some 1.4 million students are beginning the year online, according to the state.
It's the week after Labor Day and schools are now open across America, but it's only a matter of time now before COVID-19 cases skyrocket in the weeks ahead and schools are forced to shut down campus instruction and go to all virtual classes later this fall.
It's possible that the infections can be contained by masks and measures in place, but I just don't see it holding as flu season gets underway. We're going to have a lot of sick kids, sick parents, teachers and educators, and we're going to then have a lot of casualties as a result, heading into the election.
This could have been prevented six months ago. Trump knew and actively chose not to do it.
Now we have to actively choose.
No comments:
Post a Comment