Some 28 school districts announced today they are closing until March 27 because of the Covid-19 threat and despite Gov. Baker's plea to stay open unless they have confirmed cases in students, parents or staffers - including Everett, which had earlier announced a 30-day shutdown.
The school leaders held a conference call today after a lengthy call with the Department of Elementary and Secondary Education and the Massachusetts Department of Public Health. During that call, no determination was made by the state on widespread school closure. The superintendents in this region have consulted with health experts and their own municipal public health agents in reaching a decision that, while difficult, is in the interests of the safety and wellbeing of their communities, which is paramount at all times.
The Department of Secondary and Elementary Education (DESE) advised districts throughout the state this morning to cancel or reschedule gatherings of 250 people or more and to limit instances where students, faculty, and staff are closer than 6 feet away from each other. While DESE is not explicitly advising districts close at this time, due to the concerns regarding the spread of this virus among crowds, area superintendents feel it is prudent to close their facilities temporarily. District leaders additionally encourage students and staff to avoid being in large crowds of people in order to further prevent the spread of the virus.
The districts: Amesbury, Beverly, Chelsea, Danvers, Essex North Shore Agricultural and Technical School, Everett, Georgetown, Gloucester, Hamilton-Wenham, Haverhill, Ipswich, Lawrence, Lynnfield, Manchester Essex, Marblehead, Masconomet(Middle/High Schools of Boxford, Middleton, Topsfield), Methuen, Nahant, Newburyport, Pentucket(Groveland, West Newbury, Merrimac), Rockport, Saugus, Swampscott, Triton(Newbury, Rowley, Salisbury), Tri-Town School Union (wlementary schools of Boxford, Middleton, and Topsfield), Wakefield, Whittier Regional Vocational Technical High School, Winthrop Public Schools
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Comments
Charlie Baker Is a Public Menace
By Steve in Somerville
Fri, 03/13/2020 - 4:17pm
A knave, a coward, and a fool: Charlie M.F. Baker.
He knows what would help but he's unwilling to move quickly or to put his name on a policy of containment. Instead we get this utter vacuum where a real leader should be.
also
By Kerryman
Fri, 03/13/2020 - 4:49pm
Lynn and Salem
Confirming Salem's schools closed for minimum of two weeks
By E
Sat, 03/14/2020 - 11:13am
https://salemk12.org/
https://www.salemk12.org/families/c_o_v_i_d-19_upd...
Can't have a confirmed case
By anon
Fri, 03/13/2020 - 5:20pm
Can't have a confirmed case if you can't get tested.
Also
By perruptor
Fri, 03/13/2020 - 5:37pm
But wait, there's more:
“ Baker's plea to stay open
By anon
Fri, 03/13/2020 - 7:24pm
“ Baker's plea to stay open unless they have confirmed cases in students, parents or staffersâ€
So everyone knows the testing is woefully inadequate, yet we are supposed to wait for a confirmed case ?
What is wrong with this thinking?
Not everyone
By perruptor
Sat, 03/14/2020 - 8:24am
I have it on the highest authority that "we're doing a great job." If you don't agree, you're obviously not a stable genius.
The governor's advice here
By anon
Sat, 03/14/2020 - 10:24am
The governor's advice here will not look good in retrospect.
Many states are closing their schools and protecting their public employees with reasonable steps. Baker has not made that decision. He is fiddling and the people will burn.
After this virus does its worst, it will be interesting to look at the rates of transmission in Massachusetts vs states where the governors acted more decisively. The consequences will be clear.
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