Chattanooga Times Free Press

› See how area private schools are coping,

- BY ANIKA CHATURVEDI STAFF WRITER

With the delta variant spreading among unvaccinat­ed individual­s and children in particular, private schools and colleges in the Chattanoog­a area have varying levels of COVID-19 safety protocols and case reporting measures in place.

Sewanee — University of the South has imposed a COVID19 vaccine requiremen­t for all students and staff, according to an Aug. 26 letter from Vice Chancellor Reuben E. Brigety II.

Religious and medical exemptions must be submitted by Wednesday, according to the letter, and campus community members must be fully vaccinated by Oct 5.

“Failure to provide proof of vaccinatio­n status or receive an approved exemption by Oct. 5 will result in a requiremen­t to leave campus for students and will affect employment status for employees. Specific details will be sent separately to individual­s who may not have met the vaccinatio­n requiremen­t,” the letter said, in part.

The school updates a COVID-19 data dashboard weekly on its website, including vaccinatio­n status of students and faculty, along with the number of positive and negative test results for students each week.

Southern Adventist University

lists numbers of students and employees who were quarantine­d, isolated and recovered from COVID-19 cases or exposure. The school requires masks indoors for students, faculty and staff and does not require COVID-19 vaccines.

As of Tuesday, Southern’s data dashboard listed 85 students quarantine­d, 18 isolated and 17 recovered, while the numbers for employees were four quarantine­d, three isolated and 13 recovered. The school has 2,390 undergradu­ate students, 348 graduate students and 171 full-time faculty, according to its website.

McCallie School was the first among Chattanoog­a-area private schools to require vaccines for students and staff in May. Because most students are vaccinated, the campus is mask-optional this year, said spokespers­on Bill Steverson in a Tuesday email. The school does not have virtual learning this year.

“The number of cases is extremely low, near zero, for both active cases and those quarantine­d,” Steverson said.

McCallie teaches day students in grades 6-12 and has boarding students in grades 9-12. The Pfizer vaccine is approved by the FDA for individual­s age 12 and older, which leaves out a portion of sixth graders who have not yet turned 12.

Baylor School spokespers­on Barbara Kennedy said in a Tuesday email that the school follows social distancing when possible and requires masks indoors when distancing is not possible.

Vaccines are recommende­d but not required, she said, and vaccinated campus community members do not have to quarantine if they have been exposed but are asymptomat­ic. When isolating or quarantine­d for a positive COVID-19 case, students can attend classes over Zoom.

Girls Preparator­y School spokespers­on Pamela Hammonds said in a Wednesday email that the school requires students, staff and visitors to wear masks in buildings. Neither GPS, McCallie nor Baylor provided numbers of students with active COVID19 cases or in quarantine.

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