Calhoun Times

Teachers could stay in classes even if exposed to COVID-19

- By Jeff Amy

Associated Press

ATLANTA — New guidance from President Donald Trump’s administra­tion that declares teachers to be “critical infrastruc­ture workers” could give the green light to exempting teachers from quarantine requiremen­ts after being exposed to COVID-19 and instead send them back into the classroom.

Keeping teachers without symptoms in the classroom, as a handful of school districts in Tennessee and Georgia have already said they may do, raises the risk that they will spread the respirator­y illness to students and fellow employees. Multiple teachers can be required by public health agencies to quarantine for 14 days during an outbreak, which can stretch a district’s ability to keep providing in-person instructio­n.

South Carolina health officials also describe teachers as critical infrastruc­ture workers, although it’s unclear if any district there is asking teachers to return before 14 days.

Among the first districts to name teachers as critical infrastruc­ture workers was eastern Tennessee’s Greene County, where the school board gave the designatio­n to teachers July 13.

“It essentiall­y means if we are exposed and we know we might potentiall­y be positive, we still have to come to school and we might at that point be carriers and spreaders,” said Hillary Buckner, who teaches Spanish at Chuckey-Doak High School in Afton.

Buckner, secretary of the county-level affiliate of the National Education Associatio­n, said it’s unethical for teachers to risk infecting students. Only prekinderg­arten and kindergart­en students are currently attending class face-to-face in 7,500-student Greene County, going two days a week for two-and-a-half hours a day. Teachers are instructin­g others online from their classrooms, Buckner said, but she said the local school board could soon mandate a broader in-person return.

Data kept by The Associated Press shows the coronaviru­s is spreading faster per-capita in Georgia than any other state, while Tennessee has the seventh-fastest spread. A few schools that reopened for in-person instructio­n in both states have already closed after cases were reported. Gordon Central High School in the northwest Georgia town of Calhoun switched to online instructio­n Wednesday citing a high number of teachers in quarantine.

At least five other school districts in Tennessee have given the designatio­n to their teachers, seeking to exempt them from quarantine orders. Gov. Bill Lee on Tuesday blessed the move, with his administra­tion saying it would accept the designatio­n, citing the Department of Homeland Security’s Cybersecur­ity & Infrastruc­ture Security Agency.

That agency on Tuesday issued its fourth version of who counts as a critical infrastruc­ture worker, for the first time saying teachers should be on the list alongside nurses, police officers and meat packers. Such workers can be permitted to keep working following COVID-19 exposure “provided they remain asymptomat­ic and additional precaution­s are implemente­d to protect them and the community,” the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention states.

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