Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

State to share data about COVID-19 in schools

Move comes after outbreaks told at 44 unnamed sites

- By Jodi S. Cohen and Jennifer Smith Richards This story is a collaborat­ion with ProPublica Illinois. Cohen is a reporter for ProPublica Illinois. Smith Richards is a Tribune reporter. jrichards@chicagotri­bune. com

Eight months into the pandemic and following pleas from educators and parents, Illinois has decided it will publish data on the coronaviru­s’s spread in schools.

The decision comes two weeks after a story by ProPublica Illinois and the Tribune detailed the lack of informatio­n available to school officials and parents as they try to decide whether in-person learning is safe. Illinois public health officials told reporters there had been outbreaks in at least 44 school buildings across the state but declined to say where.

Late Wednesday, an Illinois Department of Public Health spokeswoma­n said publicly for the first time that the state will start sharing the number of cases and outbreaks by school. An outbreak is defined as two ormore cases tied to contact at school.

“We have been working to publish school-level data on COVID-19 and look forward to having that live in the coming weeks,” spokeswoma­n Melaney Arnold said.

That’s good news for school workers such as nurse Kathy Knawa, who is part of a team that has been helping Flossmoor School District 161, south of Chicago, decide when in-per

son classes should resume. When she tried to research COVID-19 outbreaks in schools that had already reopened, particular­ly near her district, she couldn’t find comprehens­ive state data about the number of cases or where they had been identified.

Instead, Knawa found the ProPublica Illinois/Tribune story, which explained how little was publicly known about school-connected outbreaks during the first seven weeks of the school year.

The lack of specific data from the state is frustratin­g to Knawa, whose district plans to have some students return to school buildings thisweek.

“I’m concerned we can’t find out where the outbreaks are,” Knawa said. “I just want to be able to get

informatio­n in one place. If all the towns surroundin­g you were having outbreaks, itwould be good to know.”

Many other states already publish data on outbreaks in schools. But Illinois so far has released only countyleve­l data about COVID-19 cases in people younger than 20. That age range includes many college students, so it isn’t as helpful to parents and officials in K-12 school districts.

In many parts of Illinois, the school year began more than twomonths ago. Of the school-related outbreaks documented as of early October, most have been small — two or three cases at each school building— according to the state.

IDPH’s delay in making the data available comes as Illinois is grappling with a

surge of COVID-19 cases in many communitie­s. The increases have led some schools that had planned to reopen to delay until at least early next year.

On Tuesday, the Lake County Health Department recommende­d that public and private K-12 schools transition to remote online learning as the county reported “substantia­l” community transmissi­on of the virus. In response, Grayslake schools decided to delay any decision to return to school until January, while school officials in Mundelein said they are reconsider­ing plans that would have put students back in the classroom in the comingweek­s.

According to Illinois State Board of Education data, last updated in mid

September, about 685,000 students in 69% of districts are attending school in person at least part time. About 1.2 million students continue to learn online only, including at some of the state’s largest school districts.

Chicago Public Schools, by far Illinois’ biggest district, plans to bring back preschool and special education students during the second quarter, which begins next month. COVID-19 cases are rising in Chicago, but Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot said lastweek that transmissi­on has been low in private schools that have reopened.

The district last week began posting the number of cases, with school locations, in an online COVID-19 tracker. The site, to be updated weekly, shows 172 adult and five student cases between March 7 andOct. 10.

Other schools also post detailed informatio­n. Among them: New Trier Township High School District 203 and Crystal Lake District 47.

New Trier, in Chicago’s north suburbs, recently began phasing students in at partial capacity but quickly decided to close again because of increased community spread. The district updates an online dashboard twice aweek with the number of casesamong­staff and students as well as the number in quarantine. Seven students and one staff member had active cases as ofMonday, according to the dashboard, but officials say none of the caseswas linked to transmissi­on at school.

“Local health department­s continue to be the best resource for the most up to date data as schools must report all cases directly to them. Most importantl­y, schools are also required to communicat­e with parents and guardians as new cases arise,” Arnold said.

Not all districts publicize COVID-19 informatio­n about their schools. In west suburban Addison, school socialwork­erMaria Sinkule has been calling on district officials to share data about community and school transmissi­on. Following a hybrid model, with children learning both in person and remotely, preschool and kindergart­en students began returning to school earlier thisweek; older elementary studentswe­re to return Thursday.

“I want them to be transparen­t aboutwhatt­ransmissio­n looks like within schools and what are the supports in place for families that need help,” said Sinkule, who is also president of the Illinois Associatio­n of School SocialWork­ers. “Some schools are looking out for the community, and there are others that don’t and they aren’t transparen­t. Without metrics, they can do what they want.”

It’s not clear when the health department will publish the data that educators are pushing for. Arnold promised data “in the coming weeks” but did not say more about the timing.

The state’s largest teachers union has called on IDPH to identify schools with COVID-19 outbreaks, saying “transparen­cy is key.”

“How is a community supposed to decide whether to return to the classroom if they don’t know the true impact this is having across the state?” Illinois Education Associatio­n President Kathi Griffin said in a statement. “Health officials inform communitie­s when nursing homes or jails have outbreaks because it impacts those who live and work there. Certainly, communitie­s are entitled to know about outbreaks at schools. It shouldn’t even be a question.”

 ?? ANTONIO PEREZ/CHICAGO TRIBUNE ?? New Trier High School students present their school IDs to staff as they arrive Oct. 6.
ANTONIO PEREZ/CHICAGO TRIBUNE New Trier High School students present their school IDs to staff as they arrive Oct. 6.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States