Times Colonist

Back to school with a difference this week

- DAVID CARRIGG

As parents prepare to return their children to school this week, there are many things that have changed since this time last year — and with the exception of B.C.’s rollout of out vaccines, it’s mostly not good.

The director general of the World Health Organizati­on reported to the G20 Health Ministers Meeting in Italy on Sunday that “When we met virtually in Riyadh last year, we all hoped that by now the pandemic would be under control. But the opposite is true. Many countries continue to face steep increases in cases and deaths, despite the fact that more than five billion vaccines have now been administer­ed worldwide.”

Here are some things that will be different for B.C. parents this month compared with September 2020.

1) COVID-19 metrics are worse

On Sept. 6, 2020, there were 1,331 active cases in B.C., the rolling average seven-day daily case count was 104, there were 31 people in hospital and 3,765 tests were done with a positive rate of 2.1 per cent.

Fast forward to Sept. 3, 2021, and there were 5,872 active cases, the rolling daily average was 677, there were 215 people in hospital and 13,356 tests were performed with a positive test rate of 5.7 per cent.

A key difference between these two dates is that in 2020, case counts were driven by the large Fraser Health and Vancouver Coastal Health regions, while case counts are now driven by the smaller Interior Health and Northern Health regions where vaccinatio­n rates are lower.

2) Masks are mandated for this school year, unless your child is in Grade 3 or younger

At the start of the school year in 2020, the first wave of COVID-19 had subsided and while cases were starting to climb slowly masks were not considered to be an integral tool in preventing the spread of COVID-19. It wasn’t until Nov. 19 that provincial health officer Dr. Bonnie Henry introduced a mandatory mask order for all indoor public settings. This was later lifted, but put back in place two weeks ago when the Delta variant continued to drive infection in mostly unvaccinat­ed people in the province.

For schools this year, all staff and anyone visiting a school must wear a mask at all times indoors, while all students in Grade 4 and over also has to wear a mask in school.

3) There will be no COVID-19 exposure alerts reported for schools this year

Last school year, each of B.C.’s five health authoritie­s were responsibl­e for issuing a COVID-19 exposure statement if a COVID-sick student or staff member had been at school while unwell and there was a risk others may have been exposed. Often, these were released at different intervals and there were no collated records kept. Once the exposure was considered over, the record was removed from the health authority website.

This led to parent groups — in particular the B.C. School COVID Tracker on Facebook — to gather all the informatio­n and keep a permanent record.

For this school year, Dr. Henry has announced that schools will be ending the practice of sending out mass emails every time there is a case at a school.

However, B.C.’s Minister of Education Jennifer Whiteside says parents who are worried about schools not sending out exposure notificati­ons this year should know they will be notified if their child has come into contact with someone with COVID-19.

“The health authoritie­s have the contact-tracing ability in place to ensure that process will continue. So we can be very confident that should there be an exposure in school, the family will be notified,” she said last week.

This move pulls the rug from under the B.C. School COVID Tracker, however it remains a good source of informatio­n.

4) Parents will not be able to reserve a spot for their child if they don’t return to school in person

At the start of the 2020 school year, parents were given the option of keeping their child back from school until the start of January and having their spot held.

This is not the case this time. Children are expected to return to in-class learning at their school and spaces won’t be held.

 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Masks are mandatory for kids this year, apart from Grade 3 or younger.
THE CANADIAN PRESS Masks are mandatory for kids this year, apart from Grade 3 or younger.

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