Chattanooga Times Free Press

Dalton Schools pushes start day to Aug. 31

- BY PATRICK FILBIN STAFF WRITER

As coronaviru­s cases continue to rise in Whitfield County, Georgia, the school board for Dalton Public Schools has agreed to push back the start date for classes and will implement a conservati­ve, cautious approach to reopening schools in the fall, officials said.

School will now start on Aug. 31 — a date pushed back from Aug. 6 — and parents will choose between a fully online learning curriculum or a hybrid of in-person instructio­n with virtual learning for all grade levels.

The plan is the most cautious in Northwest Georgia next to that of Whitfield County Schools, which has announced high schoolers will attend school twice a week and learn from home the remaining three days a week if they don’t enroll in virtual learning. Elementary and middle school students are still expected to attend school five days a week unless parents enroll them in virtual learning.

Whitfield County is dealing with one of the worst coronaviru­s outbreaks in the state of Georgia and the tri-state region.

From July 9 to 16, Whitfield County averaged 6.3 new cases a day per 10,000 residents. By comparison, Hamilton County averaged 2.8 new cases per 10,000 residents in the same time frame.

As of Tuesday afternoon, 108 people had been hospitaliz­ed in Whitfield County, while 2,347 had been infected with the virus and 23 people had died.

Jennifer King, a spokespers­on for the North Georgia Health District, said last week convincing members of the public that they can have an impact on slowing the spread of the disease has been a challenge for health officials.

“By neglecting to follow simple precaution­ary recommenda­tions such as wearing a mask in public, maintainin­g a social distance of at least 6 feet, avoiding large crowds and frequently washing their hands or using a hand sanitizer, many people are needlessly spreading the virus,” King said.

In a joint statement sent to the Times Free Press, the school board said the decision to delay the start of school was challengin­g and often conflictin­g.

“As a governance team, we know our community’s children need to be in school and that there are social, emotional and educationa­l factors that make the in-person environmen­t ideal,” the board said. “However, the spread of the coronaviru­s in our community is concerning and poses health and safety challenges that can be mitigated but not eliminated.”

Alongside implementi­ng more cleaning and limiting the number of students per bus, the district also plans to hire a coronaviru­s prevention and response coordinato­r and will require everyone in school facilities to wear a mask except when social distancing can be practiced.

Dalton Schools’ hybrid plan will have half the student body at each school coming in on Mondays and Tuesdays and the other half on Thursdays and Fridays. Wednesdays will be used as at-home learning while schools are deep-cleaned.

This hybrid plan will be in place until Sept. 14. After

“By neglecting to follow simple precaution­ary recommenda­tions such as wearing a mask in public ... many people are needlessly spreading the virus.” – JENNIFER KING, SPOKESPERS­ON FOR THE NORTH GEORGIA HEALTH DISTRICT

that, all students who have chosen in-person instructio­n will return to school Monday through Friday.

“We are able to change our instructio­nal model at any time as local conditions warrant,” the school board said in the statement. “We will remain flexible and adaptable.”

Dr. Steven Paynter, president of the Whitfield/Murray County Medical Society, and Dr. Zachary Taylor, director of the North Georgia Health District, wrote an opinion for the Daily-Citizen News in Dalton urging people to get tested if they have symptoms, continue to wear a mask and practice social distancing whenever possible.

Free COVID-19 testing will be available Saturday by the Whitfield County Health Department at the Mack Gaston Community Center in Dalton. Testing will be available from 8 a.m. to noon, and no appointmen­t is necessary.

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