Saturday, March 05, 2022

MASKS OPTIONAL FOR NYC K-12 SCHOOLS EFFECTIVE MARCH 7

Starting Monday masks will be optional in NYC schools for anyone age 5 and over who hasn't tested positive or shown symptoms for COVID-19 in the last ten days. 


This is from NBC 4:

Come Monday, hundreds of thousands of public school students in the nation's largest district and their educators can ditch face masks indoors, Mayor Eric Adams said Friday as he announced the looming end of one of the most profoundly impactive and longstanding mandates of the COVID pandemic.

Businesses throughout the five boroughs won't have to check vaccine cards at the door either starting next week, though they can continue to do so if they choose.

Face masks will still be required for students younger than the vaccine-eligible age of 5, though, the Democrat announced, which affects some pre-K classes, all 3-K classes and many daycare and kids' programs overseen by the health department.

Parents of kids affected by the mandate's lifting can still send them to school with masks if they prefer, and schools will have face coverings handy for anyone in need. Adams acknowledged it may take time for some to feel comfortable without masks in certain settings and he says the city fully supports their right to discretion.

Further down:

Kids of kindergarten age or higher or staff who return to school after testing positive for COVID or experiencing symptoms also have to wear masks until 10 days have passed since the diagnosis or symptoms.

I asked my two kids what they want to do and they told me they both wouldn't mind continuing to wear their masks at school. We'll see how they feel on Monday.

The positivity rate is low now in NYC. That is good news. However, if anyone denies the impact of COVID-19, look at the CDC excess death figures cited in the Washington Post on February 15:

The United States has recorded more than 1 million “excess deaths” since the start of the pandemic, government mortality statistics show, a toll that exceeds the officially documented lethality of the coronavirus and captures the broad consequences of the health crisis that has entered its third year.

The excess-deaths figure surpassed the milestone last week, reaching 1,023,916, according to Robert Anderson, chief of the mortality statistics branch of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s National Center for Health Statistics. The center updates its estimate weekly.

Although the vast majority of the excess deaths are due to the virus, the CDC mortality records also expose swollen numbers of deaths from heart disease, hypertension, dementia and other ailments across two years of pandemic misery.

“We’ve never seen anything like it,” Anderson said.

In 2019, before the pandemic, the CDC recorded 2.8 million deaths. But in 2020 and 2021, as the virus spread through the population, the country recorded roughly a half-million deaths each year in excess of the norm.

The virus emerged in China in late 2019 and began killing people there in January 2020. It did not spread significantly in the United States until that February, and it wasn’t until the final week of March 2020 that it began to send the excess-deaths metric soaring.

Later on:

Steven H. Woolf, director emeritus of the Center on Society and Health at Virginia Commonwealth University, said Tuesday that his published studies on excess deaths during the pandemic have consistently shown that 80 to 85 percent were caused by the virus directly. The remainder can largely be attributed to disruptions caused by the pandemic, he said.

“The economic and psychological stresses of the pandemic take their toll,” Woolf said.

The pandemic exacerbated existing health disparities and led to much higher mortality among Black and Hispanic people, particularly early in the crisis, research has shown. A Washington Post analysis last year found that at the time, in the 40-to-64 age bracket, 1 in 480 Black people, 1 in 390 Hispanic people and 1 in 240 Native Americans had died during the pandemic, compared with 1 in 1,300 White people and Asian people.

The United States on the whole has an unusually high rate of chronic health conditions, such as obesity, diabetes and heart disease, and has a long-recognized “health disadvantage” compared with other wealthy nations.

That disadvantage was exacerbated by a weak and scattershot response to the pandemic, Woolf said. Other countries that reacted more quickly or took more aggressive postures to control viral spread early on were able to limit their death toll as well as long-term economic impacts, he said.

“We did not handle it well. That’s glaringly obvious,” he said. “The other countries got hit by the same virus, but no country has experienced the number of deaths we have, and even if you adjust for population, we are among the highest in the world.”

If some are reluctant to say let's just move on and try to forget about the last two years, it's understandable. 

14 comments:

  1. Show those excess death numbers on a chart. It is f**ked up. Anyone who feels nothing is in complete denial.

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  2. https://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/1-in-3-excess-deaths-in-the-us-not-directly-caused-by-covid-19#Urgent-priority

    Take anxiety pills if you are nervous about tmmrw lol. Any covid talk lately??? Seems the narrative has moved on to Russia. How about that?

    Guess cutting the keystone pipeline 2nd day in office was a great idea, now we fund Russia by paying them for oil instead of being energy independent.

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  3. The politicians and bureaucrats undermined their own false narratives by being mask-less around masked children, pushing lock downs on the sheep while fleeing to free states to be mask-less, removing the congressional mask mandate one day before the SOTU (coincidence! HAHA), and of course the CDC withholding vital data because they know what is better for us than we do. Where is Dr. FauXi now?? Things are changing in blue states not because of CDC "science" because of raw political science- they are going to get their asses handed to them in November and are hoping to take credit for removing mandates.

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  4. @12:05PM
    No covid talk lately because it is all going to shit (for the power hungry liars). The masks were bullshit and the vaccine does more harm than good in 99.9% of the young.
    There are policies being implemented as a direct result of the damage caused by the so-called vaccine without any admission that the policy is due to the ineffective and untested vaccine.
    Orange County FL high schools now require students who play sports to have a electro cardiogram test beforehand.
    https://www.ocps.net/departments/Athletics/sports_physicals#:~:text=NEW%20for%20the%202021%2D22,cause%20of%20death%20in%20athletics.

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  5. Kids not taking them off. People who are afraid don’t have to worry. Out of two classes so far, maybe only 3 kids had them off. I’m not encouraging or discouraging, because it’s one’s choice, but the kids are still telling me they like the masks because they don’t have to show their faces.

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  6. 10:21 that link you posted has NOTHING to do with vaccines. My God, you people are such propagandists.

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  7. Isnt that kinda sad though that the kids are saying they dont have to show their faces. This pandemic def messed some kids social skills up. The new chancellor is talking about opening up opportunities for students to do remote learning if they "prefer to learn that way." I feel like that is potentially damaging.

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    Replies
    1. If they go remote I hope they give those jobs to the teachers who were treated like pariahs and fired over the mandate. Hopefully they get first dibs.

      Delete
  8. Kids in my school are showing their faces. It took a day but they're getting more comfortable. Set the example and take yours off.

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  9. 9:35 - here you go again. They don't deserve shit and you are delusional if you think they're getting first dibs on anything. How asinine to think they should get first dibs over teachers who have been working their asses off all year. Besides, it's a pipe dream. They're not going remote while the Mayor is going around talking about people working in their pajamas.

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    Replies
    1. I don’t why you believe that they “don’t deserve shit.” I think most teacher would NOT want remote. More than likely, if that was offered, remote would not be from home. Teachers would report to centralized locations just like the teachers who received exemptions are (some have three hour commutes!). I’ve been in touch with the teachers who are on religious/medical exemptions and they conditions they’re teaching in are awful (check out the Post article). I imagine remote teaching would not be from the comfort of one’s home, but centralized locations. Trust me, the “from
      Home” party is over. Why not offer the vaccine exempt teachers the option to join a remote district first? I don’t see why our brethren would
      Be so against that.

      Delete
  10. 12:20 NOPE. You seem to think they're entitled to something because they made their decision to not vaccinate against their employers' mandate. And let's not get started on the religious exemption bit, because that was an entire farce and you know it. Some of the same teachers screeching to the high heavens about vaccinations (not for medical exemptions) are the same ones who despise the kids they teach and will even say they are only in it for the money.

    EVERYONE is in it for the money, but you would hope that someone in a service profession would also show a little character and empathy for the people they're supposed to serve. So NO. I don't consider those types my brethen at all, and I'm glad they're gone. Those who came back have done nothing but spread vaccination propaganda to the kids. Good riddance.

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    Replies
    1. Obviously people are in this to pay bills. I like my job. But honestly, what do you care if the people who are exempt from the vaccine get stay remote? Why do you care if the people who refused the vaccine are allowed to come back as a remote teacher? I honestly think teaching remote sucks…it lacks a touch of human interaction that teaching needs. You really think tons and tons of vaccinated teachers will line up to teach remotely? I highly doubt it. Who the hell wants to trek to a centralized location each day?! Let the people who we’re screwed over the by the system back in, who weren’t even grandfathered into the old requirements…..let them back in so that they can feed their families. Check out the Post article on the teachers who are exempt. They’re teaching conditions are horrific. I don’t see people signing up that remote shit any time soon.

      Delete
  11. What?? Seriously? Nice try on changing the topic. The issue wasn't "people who are exempt from vaccine staying remote". You mentioned people who were FIRED. People who were fired were not exempt from the vaccine. My comment was responding to you saying they should get IRST DIBS. Why? I'd like a break from my two hour commute, or the energy that we encounter in the building with the noise and ruckus. Why should I care? LOL. Why shouldn't I. Who are YOU to say that those teachers should get first dibs? That question can go both ways. The teachers who are already working should have right of first refusal. If you don't think anyone will apply for it anyway, why are you still going on about it? You're not going to convince me to care about some folks who don't care about teaching, and even less about the students.

    Medical exemptions, like the person who underwent a kidney transplant and the vaccine does nothing for him, SURE. He should even be allowed to work from home. Others - NOPE! That's my opinion. You don't have to agree with it.

    ReplyDelete

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