For months, but especially after the new CDC school recs came out, supporters of reopening all schools now have been peddling the idea that schools across the country have been open all year successfully. This argument is used to push for ALL schools to be opened now.

A long 🧵
Though some schools in the U.S. are open & doing well with safety protocols, many places used as examples of opening success have profoundly unsafe schools & are neglecting covid safety. Some have been lucky not to have outbreaks and other issues--it's not that they're safe.
In the last few weeks, I've been in touch with teachers in Ohio, Florida, Texas, Wisconsin, New Jersey, Utah, and Pennsylvania.

(Thanks to @eduwonkette_jen @GeoRebekah and @saribethrose for the threads and forums that have helped me meet SO MANY teachers this year).
I collected the accounts of dozens of teachers. Obviously, this isn't an exhaustive list and it isn't a study! It's what teachers on the ground in some states are experiencing. And it's easy to see why so many in our profession are so frightened this year.

Here's the list:
There are currently open schools in the US that are being hailed as "successful" that have:

▪️no safety protocols at all besides contact cleaning, in some districts
▪️some districts with no mask mandate
▪️classes in windowless rooms, some with full classes of 20-30
▪️dozens of cases at a time but no changes in (poor) safety protocols
▪️no contact tracing or quarantining of close contacts at all
▪️teachers who have to pay for all masks and cleaning supplies for their classrooms because the school/district won't
▪️cases and spread that aren't reported to anyone
▪️teachers who are threatened not to tell anyone about cases and spread
▪️teachers who have been asked to come back early from quarantine when sick with covid
▪️ventilation that was condemned decades ago
▪️districts that threw out closure thresholds when they were reached, to keep schools open
teachers who have been threatened with retaliation for asking for PPE, ventilation and/or physical distancing
▪️administrators shame mask-wearing staff for "fear-mongering"
▪️teachers who were asked to teach remotely when sick with covid
▪️teachers who got covid at school & brought it home to vulnerable family
▪️teachers who were forced to quit because the school wouldn’t accommodate their medical conditions (including cancer and heart conditions)
▪️covid denier and mask denier administrators who are in charge of all covid safety decisions in the school(s)
▪️teachers who were told not to do anything to memorialize colleagues who died of covid bc it could upset families
NO ONE is coming to help the staff in these schools, and others like them across the country.@CDCgov recommendations (which don't need to be followed at all anyway) don't mean anything to many politicians and many school districts. There's no one REQUIRING school safety.
But many school staff are in schools NOW, some very unsafely. What can be done to help these school staff, with so little support for making schools safer?

School staff vaccinations might be the best answer.
Not a perfect answer, not without issues, but it would help overlooked teachers already in schools be there more safely, and it could also help educators in schools that haven't reopened yet be in schools more safely too.

And the fact is, we don't have many options.
@bhrenton has a great thread on educator vaccination, below. It mentions a really interesting idea of @JReinerMD that some of the soon-to-be-approved J&J vaccine, that only requires one shot, could be reserved for educators when production shoots up.
School staff in the 21 states that aren't prioritizing teacher vax (& staff in priority states having a hard time getting vaccinated soon) could be fully vaccinated by the end of March & safer in even unsafe schools by April. This could help some schools reopen more safely too.
The CDC made sure nothing could stop schools from being open if people want them to be. Safety protocols are optional. Ventilation is ignored. They made sure to say teacher vaccinations aren't a requirement to opening too.

Teachers are regarded so poorly in this country.
With so much stacked against school safety and teachers, it's heartening to see growing interest in school staff vaccinations (@POTUS @DrLeanaWen @ashishkjha @CT_Bergstrom among others).

Now we just need a real plan.
Adding some important logistical details here:

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More from @Mssarahmssarah

15 Nov 20
@NYCMayor @DOEChancellor @UFT @MOREcaucusUFT @safeschoolsny @MarkTreyger718 @NYCSchools @nycgov Speaking only for myself, as an NYC teacher, I want schools to stay open safely, if that’s possible. I’m even, personally, hoping scientists say the 3% threshold can be safely moved.
But I cannot get over, even more than the other myriad issues with this return to school, the disaster of a school covid testing plan. To see some reporters, parents, etc. regularly mention the testing as a reason schools are safe is infuriating.
The pool of testable kids is only around 15-20%. And only some of those kids have been tested, some repeatedly. Plenty, like at my school, haven’t been tested at all. Testing was supposed to be mandatory, suddenly it wasn’t. WHY?
Read 14 tweets
13 Nov 20
I was really anxious about the September reopening and had concerns about ventilation, instructional lunches, etc. Then we went back to school and I was blindsided by how absolutely it was to be with a group of ICT first graders again. I’ve loved it so much.
From a commitment ceremony between the letters q and u, the in person read alouds, the hug I got around my ankles from a child on his belly who said, “I really needed to hug you but don’t worry, I’m not breathing on you!”. All the laughter. It’s been so good. For all of us.
Read 9 tweets

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