Toronto Star

Parents upset at lack of rapid testing at schools

Province halts program over private institutio­ns’ plans to use them on kids

- MARIA SARROUH STAFF REPORTER

The provincial government will no longer provide free rapid antigen COVID-19 tests to private schools for the asymptomat­ic surveillan­ce of students, leaving parents who have been calling for the measure to be implemente­d at all schools confused and angry.

A spokespers­on for the Ministry of Education said Saturday that private schools were going against public health guidance and abusing the system by planning to administer the tests to children. Several Toronto private schools developed rapid testing programs ahead of the fall academic term to regularly screen students and staff for COVID-19.

The rapid antigen tests, which are taxpayer-funded and distribute­d to select organizati­ons through the provincial antigen screening program, are only meant to be used by employees, the spokespers­on said.

Parents questioned why the government-funded measure would not be implemente­d for students as another layer of protection, amid a fourth wave fuelled by the highly infectious Delta variant.

Anne Knight, parent of two children who attend schools within the French board Viamonde, called the government’s decision to “claw back” tests from private educationa­l institutio­ns shortsight­ed.

“It was fine and good for children in private schools to have access to rapid testing,” Knight said. “When it comes to actually managing the cost and logistical effort of providing the same treatment to public schoolchil­dren … all of a sudden it’s too much work and too much cost.”

Knight’s children are in junior kindergart­en and kindergart­en; both too young to be vaccinated.

“Our kids are worth it and we need to do what is necessary to keep them safe, to detect asymptomat­ic transmissi­on early.”

Dr. Kieran Moore, Ontario’s chief medical officer of health, said Thursday “there’s no additional value” to implementi­ng asymptomat­ic rapid antigen testing at schools, given generally low community infection rates. The tests would lead to more false positives than true positives; people who test positive need to undergo a confirmato­ry PCR test, followed by a quarantine period, he explained.

There “may be a slight benefit to asymptomat­ic rapid antigen testing at school settings,” especially in high-risk communitie­s, Moore said. He cited Windsor, which was recording around 100 cases per 100,000 people, as an example of where the province could consider doing rapid testing.

But, at this time, the “cost” and “burden” of testing doesn’t have a significan­t benefit to limiting the spread of the disease and “the cost of it is not an effective means of limiting spread,” he said.

“We’ll use that tool if and when community rates are high, but that’s much higher than where we’re at right now,” Moore said.

Toronto parent Kate Dupuis said she was “taken aback” by the government’s decision to no longer provide the tests to private schools, adding more needs to be done to ensure children are safe.

“What we were asking for was the opposite. Leave it to the kids who have it, but add in the rest of the kids,” Dupuis said. “Now they’re removing protection­s from even the kids who were protected in the first place. It honestly is very confusing.”

Several private schools — including Branksome Hall — partnered with the University of Toronto’s Creative Destructio­n Lab’s Rapid Screening Consortium to administer the tests.

Janice Stein, who serves on the lab’s steering committee, told CP24 that private schools were able to access the testing kits because “their regulatory environmen­t is simpler.”

“It suggests the reason private schools were chosen over public schools for this type of reachout and testing program is because, bureaucrat­ically, it can be a little bit simpler to work with private schools,” Dupuis said. Her children are in kindergart­en and Grade 1 within

A Ministry of Education spokespers­on said the rapid antigen tests are only meant to be used by employees

the Toronto District School Board.

“Parents at this point are really concerned. We’re willing to try a number of different options to keep our kids safe … It really feels like the rug was pulled out from under us,” she added.

Natalie Black, parent of two children in the Toronto District School Board in grades 1 and 3, said the decision was “a step in the wrong direction.”

“The message is the government is not interested in preventing transmissi­on in kids and the downstream impacts of that: kids getting sick, kids missing school, kids facing long-term health outcomes,” Black said. “To have these tools, and to be giving them to businesses and not be using them for children, I simply do not understand that decision at this point in the pandemic.”

The government should have expanded the testing to all students instead of rolling it back for some, she said.

“Parents are desperate to keep their kids safe,” Black said, adding some parent groups are organizing to collect and distribute rapid tests to the student population.

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