The Columbus Dispatch

Who enforces quarantine­s in Ohio’s schools? Nobody.

Work, classes upended with no real protocols

- Madeline Mitchell, Megan Henry and Erin Couch

These days, few things are more upsetting to parents than getting the dreaded call: your child was exposed to COVID-19 at school, and they have to quarantine.

That means anywhere from seven to 10 days out of school. Besides disrupting a student’s education, quarantine­s can upend parents’ work schedules and “(The health department) has the responsibi­lity to issue quarantine orders to close contacts that are identified. Schools have the responsibi­lity to exclude those with a quarantine order from school and school-based activities. It’s a shared responsibi­lity and requires a good partnershi­p with the schools.” even cause mental and emotional distress for kids and parents.

But who, if anyone, is actually enforcing

these protocols?

School officials themselves cannot legally enforce quarantine or isolation, but districts often aid in – or, lately, carry the brunt of the work of – contact tracing. In theory, local health department­s are the ones with the authority to contact trace, quarantine and isolate individual­s exposed to a deadly, contagious disease.

But COVID-19 has become too big for health department­s to handle on their own, leaving lines blurry when it comes to enforcemen­t.

Take Dublin Schools, for

Corey Hamilton Health commission­er for Zanesville-muskingum County

example. School officials said if a child shows symptoms at school, parents are called to pick up the student and told to quarantine for seven days with a negative test or 10 days without a test, under Franklin County Public Health’s requiremen­ts derived from the Ohio Department of Health’s guidance.

“If a parent refused to keep their child home, we reach out to Franklin County Public Health for further direction,” the district said.

But Franklin County Public Health would not provide informatio­n about what happens if a student refuses to abide by their quarantine rules.

Health department­s across the state don’t seem to have any procedures in place to deal with noncomplia­nce when it comes to quarantine.

“Failure to comply would likely fall to ODH to enforce,” Joseph Ebel, Fairfield County Department of Health commission­er said.

The state health department, though, said it holds no authority to enforce local health department­s’ requiremen­ts. It doesn’t track school quarantine­s, either; just COVID-19 case numbers by district. Finally, the data is incomplete as many districts across the state fail to submit weekly case numbers.

“To clarify, local health department­s, not the Ohio Department of Health, enforce quarantine orders,” Alicia Shoults, spokespers­on for the Ohio Department of Health, said.

“If voluntary compliance cannot be obtained, children or staff shall be excluded from in-person school and school activities, based on the quarantine order of the local health department,” Shoults said, citing Ohio law. These laws give “local health department­s the legal authority to step in to enforce quarantine if an individual will not voluntaril­y comply.”

Legally that might be true. But in practice, local health department­s do not have the bandwidth to enforce their own protocols.

“Technicall­y it is against the law for individual­s to knowingly defy quarantine or isolation orders,” Interim Butler County Health Commission­er Michelle Burch said. “We as a health department are not a law enforcemen­t agency. So that would be, truly, the responsibi­lity of a prosecutor.”

Burch said her department has yet to need the assistance of the Butler County prosecutor’s office to help with quarantine compliance. There haven’t been any referrals to the Hamilton County Prosecutor’s Office for quarantine enforcemen­t either, officials said, though the office would work “closely” with the local health department “should an issue arise.”

Officials with the Cuyahoga County Prosecutor’s Office, on the other hand, said they would not deal with noncomplyi­ng individual­s at all.

“Our office has no legal authority over an individual refusing to quarantine or isolate upon coming into contact with COVID-19. Refusing to quarantine is not a felony offense,” Cuyahoga County Prosecutor’s Office communicat­ions specialist Lexi Giering said.

In lieu of legal interferen­ce, at least at the K-12 level, some school administra­tors are stepping in as quarantine enforcers.

“If a quarantine­d student comes to school, they would not be allowed to attend class and would need to wait in the office until a parent or guardian comes to pick them up from school,” said Betsy Fuller, community relations director for Lakota Local Schools in Butler County.

Bottom line: schools, local health department­s, prosecutor­s, the state and the community at large are relying on individual­s to, well, do the right thing, and stay home if they’re sick.

How is the requiremen­t supposed to work?

The Ohio Department of Health has optional quarantine guidance and a flowchart for schools and local health department­s, which most counties have implemente­d as law during the pandemic. Experts generally agree that it is of utmost importance to keep as many healthy children involved in in-person learning as possible.

Schools with universall­y enforced masking, social distancing and other COVID-19 prevention policies in place do not generally have to quarantine students at home, per the policy, as long as those protocols are followed. Unvaccinat­ed, unmasked students or teachers do have to quarantine if they come in contact with an infected individual.

Those individual­s told to quarantine must do so for seven days if they receive a negative viral PCR or antigen test at least five days after exposure, or for 10 days without a test.

Any student who tests positive for the virus is required to isolate at least 10 days from the date of the positive test.

Sometimes, though, families are not made aware of their close contact status in time for a proper quarantine. Corey Hamilton, Zanesville-muskingum County Health Commission­er, said her department typically tries to contact families within 24 hours of learning a student was exposed to the virus.

“However, since school started we have had a surge of almost 950 positive cases associated with schools,” Hamilton said. “If you consider that each case may have 5-10 close contacts, it takes some time for us to reach everyone.”

Despite the challenges, school districts and local health department­s across the state say their partnershi­ps with one another have been invaluable in getting through the pandemic so far.

“(The health department) has the responsibi­lity to issue quarantine orders to close contacts that are identified. Schools have the responsibi­lity to exclude those with a quarantine order from school and school-based activities. It’s a shared responsibi­lity and requires a good partnershi­p with the schools,” Hamilton said.

The real consequenc­e: Further spread of the virus

In the end, those who do not follow best practices regarding quarantine and isolation run the risk of further spreading COVID-19, which so far has infected more than 43 million Americans and killed nearly 700,000, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

“Contact tracing and quarantine are techniques that public health practition­ers have used for over 100 years to control and stop the spread of communicab­le diseases,” Franklin County Public Health communicat­ions specialist Amber Breedlove said. “If contact tracing and exclusions are not made within the current guidance, the spread of COVID-19 will continue. More individual­s will be exposed and become sick. Some will be severely sick, which will lead to hospitaliz­ation, long-term health effects and unfortunat­ely death.”

Health experts have consistent­ly advised the best practices to prevent contractin­g or spreading the virus are getting vaccinated against COVID-19 and wearing a face covering.

“We are expecting the citizens of our county, in good faith, to just do their part,” Butler County’s Burch said. “We are trying to limit COVID-19 as much as we can. So we’re expecting the public to do what they need to do: get vaccinated, wear the mask, stay home if they’re sick (or) been exposed to someone (with the virus).”

 ?? LIZ DUFOUR/CINCINNATI ENQUIRER ?? First graders in Julie Fischer’s class at J.F. Burns Elementary School in the Kings Local school district head to their school special in August. Shortly after school started, the school board voted to mandate masks for pre-kindergart­en through sixth grade students due to increased numbers of COVID-19 cases and the delta variant.
LIZ DUFOUR/CINCINNATI ENQUIRER First graders in Julie Fischer’s class at J.F. Burns Elementary School in the Kings Local school district head to their school special in August. Shortly after school started, the school board voted to mandate masks for pre-kindergart­en through sixth grade students due to increased numbers of COVID-19 cases and the delta variant.

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