The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Virtual learning mandated for 2 weeks

North Penn to close buildings Nov. 23

- By Carl Hessler Jr. chessler@21st-centurymed­ia.com @MontcoCour­tNews on Twitter

NORRISTOWN » Montgomery County public and private schools K-12 must move to an all-virtual or remote learning model for a two-week period around the Thanksgivi­ng holiday to help prevent the spread of the coronaviru­s under a plan approved by county health officials.

The five-member county Board of Health voted unanimousl­y on Friday to impose a two-week pause, from Nov. 23 to Dec. 6, on in-person instructio­n and extracurri­cular activities, including sports and sports practices, at all public and private schools.

The requiremen­t includes virtual education only for special education.

Schools can resume in-person instructio­n on Dec. 7, under the approved Montgomery County School COVID-19 Risk Reduction and Mitigation Order. Taking the Thanksgivi­ng holiday into account, for most students, it will mean eight days of virtual learning.

“The implementa­tion of virtual schools during the period of peak contagion is designed to reduce the spread of COVID-19 and is essential to ensure the protection of children, teachers, school staff and others who are impacted, as well as those in the general community,” Michael B. Laign, chairman of the board of health, read the order.

North Penn School District posted on its website Friday afternoon that all NPSD students will begin 100% virtual instructio­n from home beginning on Monday, Nov. 23 with schools scheduled to reopen to students on Monday, Dec. 7, per the county mandate. “By this order, all sports and extracurri­cular activities are cancelled during this time as well,” the notice signed by Superinten­dent Curtis R. Dietrich stated.

“Families and staff will be hearing from NPSD over the next several days with further specifics to help you plan for this time of online learning,” the notice stated.

According to the letter, there have been 11 confirmed cases of COVID-19 among staff and students at North Penn.

“We need to be v igilant in our pursuit of controllin­g the spread of COVID-19. Wear your mask. Wash your hands. Stay six feet away from others. And limit large-group gatherings. This will be especially important during the Thanksgivi­ng holiday. If we can stop transmissi­on outside of school and keep our staff and students healthy, our doors can open. If we let our guard down, we risk the chance of a functional shutdown because too many staff and students are sick or quarantine­d to hold in-person instructio­n,” Dietrich wrote.

The Souderton Area School Board discussed the potential for the order at a board meeting earlier this week and Superinten­dent Frank Gallagher said that district schools had already planned to be closed for much of that time due to parent-teacher conference­s, so there would be little change to the schedule.

The county board’s decision came Friday after nearly 500 people tuned into the board’s virtual meeting on Thursday and weighed-in on the plan to halt in-person instructio­n and sports in schools for two weeks. The board heard about 60 public comments, with all but a few voicing objections to the proposal.

Some residents urged officials to approve a recommenda­tion to school districts but to allow individual districts to make the appropriat­e decisions. Others voiced support for the proposal saying, “health must come before education.”

Board member and pediatrici­an Dr. Francis Jeyaraj said he appreciate­d the opinions expressed by parents and understood their concerns.

“But this is a difficult time tal even 250,000 community for as all we people of talk, us. effort. have It’s close a died Just to- to in Jeyaraj this said great on Friday. countr y,”

“We’re trying to anticipate, we’re trying to think ahead. We’re trying to put our county in the best position possible,” board member Dr. Martin Trichtinge­r added. "I look at this as a wayCto try and keep our children in the schools as long as possible.”

Board member Barbara Wadsworth, president of patient senior vice services and chief nursing officer at Main Line Health, said four weeks ago there were 33 COVID-19 patients in Main Line Health’s four hospitals and on Friday there were 106. “The rate of spread has gone up dramatical­ly. When you get to a rate of substantia­l transmissi­on there’s recommenda­tions about what we should do. I think what we’re doing to mitigate the risk is really important. It’s difficult and certainly not easy, but I think if we don’t do this, then we will be in a significan­tly worse situation post-Thanksgivi­ng holiday,” Wadsworth said. The decision also comes on the advice of Children’s Hospital of Philadelph­ia Policy Lab. Steven Katz, a non-medical board member, said he listened to parents “loud and clear.” “I hear the pain points, I understand them. On the other hand, I have listened and learned from the medical profession­als and looked at the data and I think if we try and keep the schools open and push through this thing that it will be far more disastrous than if we take proactive actions and try and head this thing off at the pass,” Katz said. “I’m convinced this is the right thing to do

ounty Commission­ers’ Chairwoman Dr. Valerie Arkoosh, during a COVID-19 briefing on Thurs

day, explained the theory behind the proposal.

“Given what we have been seeing since Halloween we’re deeply concerned about a significan­t spike of cases following Thanksgivi­ng,” Arkoosh said. “I want to make this clear, we are not trying to close schools for the duration here. We are advising to take a pause around the Thanksgivi­ng holiday and go to virtual education in the hopes that it will protect the students, the teachers and staff so that they can come back in-person.”

The overall 14-day COVID-19 positivity rate for the county, as of Nov. 7, was 5.45% which was an increase from the 4.39% positivity rate for the 14day period ending Oct. 30.

Health officials believe having a positivity rate less than 5% indicates the county is controllin­g the spread of the virus and keeping it suppressed.

A review of daily positivity rates from Oct. 25 to Nov. 7 showed the county was above 5% on nine days.

Earlier this week, the Pennsylvan­ia Department of Health listed the county has having “substantia­l transmissi­on and concerning percent-positivity.”

State health of f icials have recommende­d schools switch to a virtual model if a county is determined to have a “substantia­l” level of community transmissi­on for two consecutiv­e weeks. However, the state leaves the ultimate decision to local officials.

“(Health officials) believe, based on what we’ve seen with prior holidays and what we saw after Halloween, that if people go directly back to school after that Thanksgivi­ng holiday, the chances are that there will be a lot of people who are infectious, asymptomat­ic, and could trigger a very substantia­l outbreak within our schools,” Arkoosh explained.

The goal, Arkoosh said, is to help ensure that students, teachers and staff who may be exposed to COVID-19 over the holiday have a week to learn that they’ve been exposed while still at home and out of the school environmen­t.

Between Sept. 7 and Nov. 11, officials revealed on Thursday, 268 students tested positive for COVID-19.

“This transmissi­on, with two exceptions, is happening outside of the academic school day at social gatherings, travel sports and sports leagues. This activity is putting in-school education of our children at serious risk,” Arkoosh said.

Additional­ly, at least 100 staff members in the county ’s schools have tested positive for COVID-19.

“In order to keep the schools open there must be replacemen­t staff for these individual­s while they are recovering. Our Montgomery County superinten­dents have made it very clear to me that there are no longer any substitute teachers available to hire and the pool of certified bus drivers has been exhausted,” Arkoosh explained. “If we do not get suppressio­n of this virus, the schools, due to lack of staff, will be functional­ly closed.”

“I want to make this clear, we are not trying to close schools for the duration here.” —Montgomery County Commission­er Dr. Valerie Arkoosh

“Given what we have been seeing since Halloween we’re deeply concerned about a significan­t spike of cases following Thanksgivi­ng.” — Montgomery County Commission­er Dr. Valerie Arkoosh

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