Cupertino Courier

Delta variant puts a damper on students’ return to classes

- Mangst @bayareanew­sgroup.com

With thousands of San Jose students returning to the classroom, the longawaite­d start of a fully inperson school year isn’t drumming up the level of excitement anticipate­d only a few months ago when an end to the coronaviru­s pandemic finally seemed in sight.

A surge of COVID-19 cases spurred by the highly contagious delta variant has many parents worried, yet again, about how safe their children will be in classrooms.

While San Jose Unified School District leaders say they’ve taken “every reasonable step to make schools safe,” some parents still say they have unanswered questions about what will happen when the inevitable occurs and kids are exposed to the circulatin­g virus.

“The (delta) variant is very concerning, especially for my son in middle school where a lot of the kids are not going to be vaccinated,” said Michele Quanz, a downtown San Jose resident and parent of two children in the district. “I’m still not sure what they’re going to do if they have a shortage of teachers or a lot of kids are getting sick.”

Quanz said she’s been pushing district and school leaders to clarify what happens if a student tests positive, under what circumstan­ces a student will be required to quarantine and how many cases it’ll take to warrant a full class quarantine or a school closure.

San Jose Unified became one of the first districts in the state to announce last month that teachers and staff must either be vaccinated or get tested for CO

VID-19 twice a week.

In addition to the vaccinatio­n/testing rule, San Jose Unified also will require all students and staff to wear masks both inside and outside school buildings, regardless of vaccinatio­n status — a step beyond the state’s public health orders that call only for indoor mask-wearing. The district was also planning to send out a guide with more details on its COVID-19 safety protocols to parents.

“Obviously we can’t guarantee that it’s going to be 100% effective, but based on the guidance, we feel very confident that our students and staff will be as safe as we can possibly make them,” district spokespers­on Jennifer Maddox said.

According to Maddox, as of Aug. 10, 2,458 of the district’s 2,693 staff members — or 91% — had reported they were fully vaccinated, leaving only 235 who will need to get tested twice a week unless they get shots. Maddox said the district has noticed a trend of lower vaccinatio­n rates among classified staff, such as custodians, bus drivers and clerical staff, who generally earn lower wages than teachers or school leaders.

“We continue to try and ensure employees have access to informatio­n about the vaccine and why getting it is important,” she said. “And we’re expecting to see that number grow as the days and weeks go on.”

Quanz said she was pleased to hear about the district’s vaccinatio­n mandate, but if given the choice, she would still keep her students — one middle schooler and one high schooler — at home for the start of the school year.

Although California has required school districts to provide an online option for students this year, the hybrid learning approach where parents could choose whether to send their child to classes in person or have them take lessons virtually from home is no longer offered.

In San Jose Unified, parents can place their children in an independen­tstudy program, but they’ll need to make that decision by the start of the school year and it’s much different from the distance learning students grew accustomed to last year.

For many parents, the idea of keeping their children at home for a full school year wasn’t one they contemplat­ed.

“I have COVID anxiety again if you will, but my husband and I both work and we really need them in school so that we can work and be better parents to them,” said Tracy Misiewicz, a parent of a kindergart­ner and second grader at River Glen School.

Across the country, pediatric cases of COVID-19 are soaring along with cases among unvaccinat­ed adults, indicating that the hyper-transmissi­ble delta variant is taking the biggest toll on those who are either choosing not to get vaccinated or cannot get vaccinated for various reasons, including millions of children younger than 12.

The risk became clear earlier this month when two of the first Bay Area school districts — Liberty Union High and Brentwood Union in eastern Contra Costa County — reported dozens of COVID-19 cases among students in the first few days of the school year, although most were infected off campus.

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