Miami Herald (Sunday)

COVID numbers continue rising in South Florida schools, but there’s no plan to close

- BY DAVID GOODHUE AND COLLEEN WRIGHT dgoodhue@flkeysnews.com cawright@miamiheral­d.com

Public schools in both Miami-Dade and Broward counties saw their confirmed COVID-19 cases jump by well over 100 in a week’s time, a trend that started shortly after students were allowed back to in-person learning in early October.

Despite the rise, neither school district has immediate plans to close schools down and return to onlineonly classes.

The same is true in Monroe County, where cases in Florida Keys public schools jumped from 46 students, teachers and non-teaching staff last Friday to 62 by the end of this week, a 35 percent increase.

The island chain saw a spike in confirmed novel coronaviru­s cases this month, with the Florida Department of Health reporting 99 infected people Friday in Monroe County. Since the pandemic began, a high case count in the Keys has been around 30.

The percent positive rate — the percent of all COVID tests performed that come back positive — in all three counties is also increasing at a pace that concerns health officials.

When schools opened in the fall, the rate was under 5% in all three counties. This week in Miami-Dade, the rate climbed to over 9% and to more than 7 percent in Broward. In the Keys, the daily positivity rate reached a high of 20 percent, state health officials said Friday, jumping from from 11.78% to 20.38%.

However, while officials said they are closely monitoring schools, tracing shows that the cases so far have not originated there.

“They’re not considerin­g closing now because, while our numbers are slowing increasing, none of it is because of school,” said Becky Herrin, spokeswoma­n for the Monroe school district.

At Wednesday’s meeting of the Miami-Dade County School Board, there was no discussion about closing schools.

“No determinat­ion has been made at this time,” Natalia Zea, district spokeswoma­n, said in an email to the Herald.

Broward schools officials also have no immediate plans to shut down in the midst of the rising numbers, which the teachers’ union finds troubling. The percent positive rate began the week at almost 9%, and the week ended at almost 8%.

“They actually talked about not closing schools due to the governor not OK with it,” Anna Fusco, president of the Broward

COVID-19 cases in Miami-Dade, Broward and Monroe county public schools are rising as students head into Thanksgivi­ng break.

Teachers Union, said about School Board members who met this week. “I think it’s deplorable. The virus is spreading and people are walking around acting like it’s not happening.”

While Gov. Ron DeSantis is against closing down schools as a means of stopping the spread of the coronaviru­s, the ultimate decision is up to individual school districts.

Funding, however, is distribute­d by the state. Districts often follow guidance set by the Florida Department of Education to avoid having dollars withheld.

In Miami-Dade, the number of confirmed cases the school district posted on its online dashboard Friday was 729, up from 548 cases Friday, Nov. 13.

In Broward, confirmed cases rose over a sevenday period from 448 to

578 on Friday, according to that district’s dashboard.

The numbers are likely significan­tly higher, however, because districts only post cases on their respective ledgers after the Department of Health confirms them. School officials in all three counties urged people not to view the dashboards as up-todate measures of the COVID situation in schools.

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