The Iowa Department of Public Health and the Department of Education released new COVID recommendations late Friday afternoon. All of our COVID policies are board directed. A special board meeting is scheduled for Monday at 5:00 pm to address the newest recommendations. Attached is the agenda for the meeting and the letters from the state.
Agenda:
Vinton-Shellsburg Community School District
May 17, 2021 - 5:00 PM
Central Office Board Room, 1502 C Ave., Vinton, IA 52349
https://zoom.us/j/92132130239?pwd=RUgzQUt5SGl5dENIMys1Z1RZQk8xQT09
Password: 2m54fe
BOARD MEETING AGENDA
1. Call to Order
2. Roll Call / Pledge of Allegiance
3. Receive Visitors/Public Comments Discussion Item
4. Iowa Department of Health COVID Recommendations Action Item
5. Adjournment
Here is a link to the Iowa Department of Public Health Guidelines for Childhood Illnesses
Below is the letter from the Iowa Board of Health:
May 14,2021
Dear Education and Child Care Professionals,
I write to you today to underscore the continued importance of supporting children as we
navigate this recovery phase of our COVID-19 response. From the beginning, this response
effort has been grounded in mitigating risk and protecting our vulnerable populations,
realizing that completely eliminating risk was never an option. We appreciate the difficult
position school administrators and child care providers, who are not necessarily health
professionals, have had to navigate. Your efforts over the last year have required patience,
grace, and flexibility. For that, we are tremendously grateful.
For the 2020-2021 school year—knowing that spread of disease in schools is minimal and
can be mitigated with strong infection control measures—Iowa shifted to support safe, inperson learning. And for child care settings, Iowa's child care providers remained open,
supported by DHS. To successfully implement that strategy, Iowa issued guidance that
allowed children exposed to COVID-19 while wearing a cloth face covering to avoid
quarantine. This allowed kids to remain in school, with all of the benefits that in-person
learning provides. Cloth face coverings have been one of the tools in mitigating the spread
of COVID-19 and, along the way, additional tools to treat and mitigate the spread of COVID19 have also come along, such as therapeutics and vaccines.
Our response today does not, and should not, look the same as it did a year ago. in fact,
yesterday the CDC announced updated guidance rolling back mask usage for adults. Our
guidance is also evolving as we learn more information. This evolution allows people to
hone in on what is risky and what is not—which ultimately keeps our collective public health
response strong.
With that in mind, and with acknowledgement that the goal of every educational institution
and child care provider is to safeguard children from harm and foster inclusion, today, the
Iowa Department of Public Health has adjusted its guidance to recommend that schools and
childcare settings approach COVID-19 like other child illnesses. For ease of reference,
please see the attached detailed list of common child illnesses and exclusion criteria, which
now includes COVID-19. This guidance comes in consultation with the Department of
Education, and underscores that the overall health and well-being of children must be our
primary focus.
We are concurrently revising our COVID-19 guidance for school and child care settings,
including quarantine guidance, to recommend that while COVID-19 positive and
symptomatic children should be excluded, exposed children should no longer be required to
stay home, regardless of mask usage. Moreover, when there is a positive case, parents should be given information around exposure to COVID-19 in order to make their own
informed decisions regarding risk. To that end, while we acknowledge that some parents
may want their child to continue to wear a cloth face covering for reasons that make sense
for their family or that child's indivldua! health condition, we urge schools and child care
settings to provide parents and students with the option to make their own decision about
mask usage.
As this school year winds down and summer school and camps begin, we must work
together to continue to support a flexible approach. We stand ready to provide the support
necessary to ensure our children's success.
Sincerely,
Keliy Garcia
Director, Departments of Public Health and Human Services
CC: LEA Superintendents
LEA Principals
Nonpublic School Administrators
LEA School Business Officials
LEA Directors of Special Education
AEA Chief Administrators
AEA Ed Services Directors
AEA Media Services Directors
AEA Business Officials
AEA Directors of Special Education
Childcare Resource and Referral
All Licensed and Registered Childcare Entities
Early Childhood Iowa
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