Dayton Daily News

7 ways to make Halloween safe

- ByJeanette­Marantos

Coronaviru­s is the real boogeyman this year, but health officials suggest ways to have fun and stay safe.

Finally it's time to start dreaming of fall ... those chilly nights, crisp apple cider and, of course, Halloween!

Everyone's favorite, with costumes and candy, scary make-believe (and candy), trick-or-treating (and CANDY), fun decoration­s and ... Stop.

In case you forgot, the coronaviru­s is still a very real boogeyman, lurking behind every mask. Many U.S. cities' health department­s, including Los Angeles County's Department of Public Health, has already put the kibosh on Halloween traditions such as haunted houses and parties and recommends people avoid door-to-door trickor-treating or even “trunkor-treating,” bywhich children collect treats walking from car to car at gatherings in school or church parking lots.

“Door to door trickor-treating is not recommende­d because it can be very difficult to maintain proper social distancing on porches and at front doors, ensure that everyone answering or coming to the door is appropriat­ely masked to prevent disease spread, and because sharing food is risky,” according to the newhealth order.

“This year, it's just not safe to celebrate in the ways we usually do,” Public Health Director Barbara Ferrer told The Times. “We are recommendi­ng that trick-or-treating not happen this year.”

Canceling Halloween may seem particular­ly harsh, considerin­g all the challenges and disappoint­ments kids have faced this year, but health officials are doing everything they can to reduce the spread of

the infection, which some fear could see a resurgence this fall.

“Viruses don't take holidays,” said Anne Rimoin, professor of epidemiolo­gy at UCLA's School of Public Health. “Until the community has low transmissi­on rates, lots of things won't be back to normal. Theway a virus transmits doesn't change because we're in holiday mode. In fact, it often makes us less cautious because our guard is down. We have to accept the fact that the virus is dictating the precaution­s we have to take.”

Lest you've forgotten those precaution­s, that means six feet of social distancing (i.e., no kids crowding around a candy bowl at your front door), wearing masks (not cute Halloween masks, but protective masks that cover your mouth and nose), avoiding crowded, confined spaces (like haunted houses, where people do a lot of

screaming, thus expelling germs) and practicing good hygiene (washing hands often and absolutely no bobbing for apples).

But really, this is Halloween we're talking about, near the top of every child's can't-wait list. Canwe really just lock our doors, turn off the lights and say, “Better luck next year?”

No, darn it, this is America, land of the free and home of “There's got to be a way,” so, of course, people are already working on this problem.

Not surprising­ly, the National Confection­ers Associatio­n is all over this issue on its Halloween Central website at alwaysatre­at.com (#HalloweenI­sHappening).

Thewebsite includes statistics, such as 74% of millennial moms and young parents say Halloween is more important than ever this year, and tips for how to celebrate Halloween out of the house or in.

Several other online groups have weighed in with ideas. We'd love to hear your solutions and would like to share them in a future story. In the meantime, we asked friends and family and on Facebook, gathering seven creative tips for how we can celebrate Halloween this year without infecting our kids or ourselves.

1. Go BIG on decorating

Thismaywel­l be the year to pull out the stops decorating in and outside your home, just for the fun of it. String up some lights. Invest in a fog machine. Stuff some old clothes to make a headless scarecrow ... or invest in something more elaborate at local stores. Decorate or carve multiple pumpkins _ have a family contest and ask neighbors to vote on their favorites ( just remember that pumpkins don't last long once they're carved, especially in California's balmy fallweathe­r, so hold off on carving until a day or two before Halloween). Or you could grab a marker and draw on gourds for “carvings” with more staying power.

2. No grab bowls

We need to rethink the way we pass out candy, says Rimoin, the UCLA epidemiolo­gy professor. Kids crowding around the door and expelling potentiall­y virus-laden droplets as they shout “trick or treat” is a no-go, but that doesn't mean we can't find other ways to pass out candy. Rimoin recommends individual­ly bagging treats and leaving them on a table on your driveway for children to take as they walk by. You canwave from the porch, replenish between visits and keep an eye on little ghouls who want to take more than their share.

3. Dangle treats

CeeAnn Thiel, owner of Mrs. Tiggy Winkles Gift Shoppe in Riverside, has a wrought-iron fence around her home. She's planning to hang candy fromthe fence for children to grab as they pass. And Pete VanWell, an orchardist in Wenatchee, Washington, told his Facebook friends he intends to hang candy from the tree near his front porch so children can “pick their treats the way we pick apples.”

4. Keep it indoors

One mom said on Facebook that she plans to fill a Halloween bag with candy, hide it in her house and then turn off the lights so her child has to search for the goodies in the dark. Variations on that theme could include a scavenger hunt in the house or yard, or a set of clues for older children to decipher.

5. Eerie, glowing ... eggs

Break out those plastic eggs you use to hide candy at Easter and decorate them with scary faces or decals, an ideawe found at indywithki­ds.com.

Fill the eggs with candy and hide them outside or around the house. If you stuff them with glowsticks, you can even turn out the lights or search the yard at night for eerie, glowing eggs.

6. Movie scare-a-thon

Haunted houses are not recommende­d, but you can screen Halloween-themed movies indoors or out if you have aprojector­anda screen or some other blank surface. The nice thing about homebaseds­carymovies­isyoucan adjust the scare-o-meter tofit your family's tastes (and terror tolerances). If you want to invite other families, the website rocketcity­mom.com suggests buying some hula hoops at a dollar store to establish six-foot boundaries between family groups. And, of course, provide each group with its own supply of treats so no one is sharing popcorn or other items from the same bowls.

7. Boo someone, sweetly

Think of “booing” someone as a kind of random act of kindness for Halloween. Wrap up a (nice) Halloween treat, drop it at a neighbor or friend's door, ring the bell and run like crazy. The idea is to spread some holiday cheer.

There's even a website with poems and posters you can print out, at beenbooed. com. (The website suggests doing it anonymousl­y. However, we suggest you first call or send a text to alert recipients to the arrival of a sweet treat, so it doesn't get tossed in the garbage.)

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 ?? DAVID CARPIO/ SHUTTERSTO­CK ?? Health officials recommend people avoid door-to-door trick-or-treating or even “trunkor-treating,” by which children collect treatswalk­ing fromcar to car at gatherings in school or church parking lots.
DAVID CARPIO/ SHUTTERSTO­CK Health officials recommend people avoid door-to-door trick-or-treating or even “trunkor-treating,” by which children collect treatswalk­ing fromcar to car at gatherings in school or church parking lots.

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