No surprise, king Andy vetoed the bills. Now on Feb 2, the legislature needs to come back and override the vetoes. Then on Feb 3, the lawsuits can begin.
Neither of those 2 districts are going back this year. It'll be a few weeks to vaccinate everyone once. Then a month to get 2nd dose. Then a month for it to be effective.
5%, Mark. Every life matters. We're not shooting for 95%, Anything less than 0 cases ever and we're doing NTI.You have some immunity (40-50%) approx 7-10 days after first shot, then 95% 7-10 days after 2nd shot.
Heard tonight about a 17 year old that played in little league the same time as my son, but 2 years older, committed suicide. Ive heard too many of those stories in the last couple of months. Sick to my stomach.
As Nashville middle and high school students sat learning remotely from home last November, a Metro Nashville school board member took a trip to the Caribbean — and some parents aren't happy about it.
https://www.tennessean.com/story/ne...ristiane-buggs-caribbean-vacation/4209158001/
Heard tonight about a 17 year old that played in little league the same time as my son, but 2 years older, committed suicide. Ive heard too many of those stories in the last couple of months. Sick to my Lstomach.
Bump for our kids. I wish there would be a massive rally to get kids back in school. They may not have authority to force the schools open but I am extremely disappointed by leaders in our city who have stayed silent on kids suffering at home. I wish the mayor or other city leaders would speak up to advocate returning kids to the classroom. Science has shown us that kids staying at home are causing spread of the virus, along with depression, suicide, drug use, abuse, neglect, and even possibly death in parents and kids. This experiment by FCPS and the school board must end. Their slogan says “It’s about kids”, but they are not living by their words right now. Right now it’s about $$$ and unions. I won’t stop fighting for my kids but more importantly will continue to fight for the disadvantaged kids who are suffering the most while forced to stay home from school.
Does Fayette County have any statistics on suicides, drug overdoses, deaths of parents or kids since kids have been home?
Things like this article are why schools aren't opening this spring and probably not fully open by fall in larger metro areas. Tons of great stuff in there.
"It's fear-based," she says of the drive to stay remote. "Like if it was science-based, fact-based, data-based, we could put out a metric or we could look at the data and decide when we get there and when it's safe. But it has become an emotional conversation. It's become a political conversation. And I don't know where and how you end those."
The goalposts on "safe" also seem to keep moving. Now that vaccines are out, some teachers say they will agree to return to work in person only when fully vaccinated, which could take months.
That is NPR btw... not Fox or something like that. Also that is Biden's CDC that released the report they reference.
I don’t think that is anything new, is it? They’ve had this matrix deal going for a while. Sounds like your source has it backwards. The seven day average number is the main indicator of return, but vaccinations, student and staff isolations (those numbers were released yesterday) and something else I can’t remember will be considered. So vaccinations are a part of it but have never been considered THE main roadblock to returning. If it was, they would have been mandatory. Maybe I missed something.Just heard thru reliable source that FCPS will not commit to a return to in person instruction once all staff have vaccines that want it. Decision makers will still look at other factors such as case counts, community spread, etc. Pathetic! FCPS jumps line to take the shot and says yeah, we may still stay at home. Someone from the news needs to ask FCPS the simple question..once all staff are vaccinated that want it, will you be back to in person learning? That needs to be in the paper today. Anyone know any news people?
If you disagree with the protests and sick-outs, then I can understand that. Reasonable adults can have different views on things. But please remember, Joe and Judy Classroom Teacher have very little to say in the school re-opening. We were surveyed (most chose to go back), we trained for hybrid, it was shut down, and now we’re training for graduated return, if it happens. I want my kids in school and I want the normalcy of a regular school year. In other words, it’s not up to us.I’ve always had a soft spot in my heart for teachers, but they have lost a lot of my respect in the last couple of years.
I should not lump all teachers into my disappointment, you’re correct there. I would say though that if you guys really want to be back in the classroom, you would be there soon. If teachers can call in sick when they are not sick and cause a school to close, they can also do the opposite and put pressure on the BOE to open up.If you disagree with the protests and sick-outs, then I can understand that. Reasonable adults can have different views on things. But please remember, Joe and Judy Classroom Teacher have very little to say in the school re-opening. We were surveyed (most chose to go back), we trained for hybrid, it was shut down, and now we’re training for graduated return, if it happens. I want my kids in school and I want the normalcy of a regular school year. In other words, it’s not up to us.
If you disagree with the protests and sick-outs, then I can understand that. Reasonable adults can have different views on things. But please remember, Joe and Judy Classroom Teacher have very little to say in the school re-opening. We were surveyed (most chose to go back), we trained for hybrid, it was shut down, and now we’re training for graduated return, if it happens. I want my kids in school and I want the normalcy of a regular school year. In other words, it’s not up to us.
I didn’t get involved in any of that, but my guess is that teachers and admin and BOEs are technically all on the same side, and not fighting the legislature and/or governor this time. All of the board meetings are on Zoom and there is limited availability for public comment (although it is there if needed). I can’t answer for everyone, though. I’m not a boat rocker.Why aren’t the teachers as vocal about wanting to get back in school as they were about their pensions (protests, sick out, social media etc)?
I mean you're right, blaming individuals is kinda harsh, but after the pension stuff sick out, IMO, this is a wet fart in a crowded elevator. The reality is, most people are going to blame the teachers. Right or wrong. I think that lies pretty close to the middle. I've seen business owners and employees out fighting for their life to work. Haven't seen that motivation in teachers and frankly it's very disappointing. They know the damage being caused and are remaining silent.
That’s a big if, though. I think what we’ll see is that for the week of the 22nd the 7-day average number will align about the same time that most teachers have had the second dose for over a week. It’ll all magically come together.Just saying, if these places refuse to return after cutting line for vaccines? Man, that's a tough pill to swallow.
I don’t think that’s true. The threshold might be too high, in my personal opinion. The previous post is all my guess. I haven’t heard that from anyone else but me. There’s a number goal of 132 and we’re trending downwards toward that, unless something goes bad wrong in the next two weeks.Well isn’t that convenient. Which just means the case count numbers are all ******** to begin with.