Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

2 POSITIVE covid-19 tests tied to LR school day camp.

- CYNTHIA HOWELL

A parent and a child affiliated with a Little Rock School District “day camp” at Pulaski Heights Elementary and Middle schools have tested positive for the covid-19 infection, Superinten­dent Mike Poore said Monday.

As a result, some others affiliated with the school program, which provides child care services for University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences employees, have been quarantine­d and tested, Poore said. As of late Monday afternoon, Poore said, he knew of no additional positive cases.

News of the positive cases related to the day camp comes just after the district confirmed last week that three district employees had tested positive for the disease caused by the coronaviru­s that is at the center of a global pandemic.

Poore said Monday that two of those employees work at one site and were preparing for the collection of school property from students here at the end of the school year. The other was a child nutrition worker, he said, declining to give other details about the employees.

The school buildings in the district and throughout the state have been closed to in-person instructio­n since March at the direction of Gov. Asa Hutchinson.

Schools were closed as an effort to slow the spread of covid-19, which is contagious and potentiall­y fatal — especially in older people or those with other health problems. Since the end of school-based instructio­n, Little Rock district employees have been called on to help with the distributi­on of school meals at designated pick-up sites, the distributi­on of Chromebook­s and other devices for students to use at home, and to staff the day camps for children of health care workers.

Late last week, Poore sent letters to parents of the kindergart­en-through-fifth-grade children enrolled in the Pulaski Heights program, notifying them that a parent of two children in the program had tested positive.

In the Thursday letter, Poore said that the two children were not symptomati­c and had only been at the day camp one day between April 22 and May 8. The day camp opened April 20. He also wrote that the children would not be allowed to return to the program for 14 days.

On Monday, Poore said that one parent and one child had tested positive for the virus. It was not immediatel­y clear from Poore whether the child is the offspring of the infected parent or from a different family. “We have worked with Arkansas Children’s Hospital and the Arkansas Department of Health to understand how many people needed to be quarantine­d within those groups,” Poore said about the day camp. “One of the things of we tracking are something can needs all

Poore, interactin­g. are identify of to really go which that who does and specifical­ly so We good was kids to that happen, get keep recovering and at tested.” in track case … who staff we is a while know weekend at how home exercising, many fall Monday he at suffered did the from day not camp and no additional tested have been but positive had quarantine­d heard cases. of quarantine­d,”

“There are Poore others said. being “I can’t tell you where their tests stand — how many have been tested and how many came back. I’ve not heard of any other positive cases. But I don’t know if that means the tests just haven’t come back or that there have been some [negative] test results that have come back.”

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