Dayton Daily News

New rules aim to keep more in class

Unclear if more Ohio districts will rescind mask mandates.

- By Kristen Spicker and Jordan Laird Staff Writers

Updated COVID-19 quarantine guidelines for schools released by the Ohio Department of Health on Monday focus on students and staff exposed to the virus wearing face masks and getting tested to allow them to continue with classroom learning and school-related extracurri­culars.

The Mask to Stay and Test to Play guidelines were created using informatio­n gathered from a pilot quarantine program in Warren County where schools did not require masks for all and followed similar guidelines, as well as from local health department­s and other programs outside of Ohio, ODH Director Dr. Bruce Vanderhoff said.

“This is an important step on our path to assuring the developmen­tal needs of our K-12 students are met, even as we work hard to protect them and their families and loved ones from the risk of COVID-19,” he said.

The guidelines are for students and staff who were exposed to COVID in a classroom setting or school-related activity. Those exposed to COVID-19 outside of school should continue to follow standard quarantine measures, Vanderhoff said.

Schools can immediatel­y begin implementa­tion, but they are not required to adopt the state-issued guidelines. Parents can opt out of them, he added.

Under Mask to Stay, students and staff can continue with in-person learning after being directly exposed to COVID-19 in a school setting if they do the following:

■ Wear a mask for at least 14 days after the initial exposure date.

■ Self-monitor or have a parent monitor for symptoms of COVID-19.

■ Isolate and get tested if they show symptoms of COVID-19,

regardless of the severity of symptoms.

■ Students and staff can discontinu­e the masking after seven days if they don’t develop any symptoms and if they test negative for the virus between days five and seven from their exposure.

Though parents and individual­s are responsibl­e for monitoring for symptoms under Mask to Stay, if a school staff member or nurse sees someone showing symptoms for coronaviru­s, they should act accordingl­y, Vanderhoff said.

Test to Play permits students and staff to participat­e in extracurri­cular activities after being directly exposed to COVID in a school setting if they do the following:

■ Wear a mask when able, such as while on a team bus, in the locker room or while on the sidelines or bench.

■ Get tested for COVID-19 once they learn they were exposed to the virus.

■ Test again between days five and seven following the initial exposure.

■ Students and staff can discontinu­e the quarantine procedures after seven days if they test negative between days five and seven.

Students and staff can use either PCR or rapid antigen tests, Vanderhoff said. However, the tests must be proctored or observed. He added with Test to Play, schools should consider same-day testing for athletic competitio­ns.

Warren County pilot program

During the pilot program in Warren County, roughly 97% of students deemed a direct contact in school did not develop symptoms for COVID-19, according to Springboro Schools District Communicat­ions Coordina- tor Scott Marshall.

Springboro Schools, a par- ticipant in the pilot program for the past three weeks, was able to keep 13 direct con- tacts in school who never developed symptoms of COVID-19, Marshall said. Weekly positive COVID-19 case numbers in the district have been between 9 and 16 during the pilot program. That’s down from in Sep- tember when weekly cases ranged from 20 to 41.

Mason City Schools was able to keep 57 healthy students in school during the pilot program, according to a district spokeswoma­n.

“This new quarantine o ption allows healthy students to stay in school — preserving students’ ability to connect with their teach- ers and classmates,” said Jonathan Cooper, Mason City Schools superinten­dent. “We are also grateful to be able to leverage testing in order to allow healthy kids to actively engage with their

extracurri­cular activities — something we know is critical for their mental health.”

Will more local schools change guidelines?

The majority of Montgom- ery County school districts have face mask mandates. Shannon Cox, superinten- dent of the Montgomery County Educationa­l Service Center, said county districts are open to adopting the new guidelines from ODH but she’s not sure whether districts will rescind their mask mandates at the same time.

“Obviously, they will be taking that to their board of education or their teachers unions and/or their cabinet members,” Cox said. “You know there’s a lot of discus- sion that has taken place to put the mask mandates in place. So getting rid of them obviously will take time and discussion.”

The superinten­dents of Dayton Public Schools and Kettering City Schools both said their districts will need time to discuss these new guidelines from ODH before making any decisions.

“We will need to take a look at these guidelines in more detail before making any decisions with regard to processes we currently have in place surroundin­g masking and quarantini­ng,” said Scott Inskeep, superinten­dent of Kettering City Schools. “As always, our decisions are grounded in our desire to keep students safe and in school.”

Cox said the test to play portion of the new guidance is welcome but could be logistical­ly challengin­g because none of the districts have the ability to do testing on site.

Dan Suffoletto, a spokes- man for Public Health-Dayton & Montgomery County, said that students and school staff should wear face masks to reduce the spread of COVID-19. The new state guidelines, which call for masking in lieu of quarantini­ng, further emphasized that masks provide good protection, he said.

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