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Parents petition school board to require masks

Masks back at college

BY HOLLY KAYS STAFF WRITER

With case numbers surging and fall semester beginning, local colleges and universities are reinstituting indoor masking requirements that had been lifted for the summer months.

“We know that getting all eligible people vaccinated is the best way to combat this virus,” said Southwestern Community College President Don Tomas. “We need to implement this mask mandate to try and keep everyone as safe as possible as we start our fall semester. We will continue to monitor daily case numbers and review CDC and local/state guidance.”

Western Carolina University was the first to enact the new guidelines. In an email to students, faculty and staff sent Tuesday, Aug. 3, WCU Chancellor Kelli R. Brown said that the university remains “committed to having a robust campus experience for students and our campus community” and that “vaccination remains the best path forward for a full return to normal operations this fall.”

Effective immediately, she wrote, face coverings would be required in all public indoor spaces on both the Cullowhee and Biltmore Park campuses. The change is in response to new Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommendations stating that, regardless of vaccination status, people should wear face coverings in areas with high or substantial community spread. All of Western North Carolina currently falls into this category.

Additionally, students, faculty and staff at WCU are being asked to report their vaccination status.

“This information will be used to inform WCU’s ongoing preparations and planning,” Brown wrote. “We do not plan to share individual vaccine status information. We plan to share only aggregate group percentages of vaccine status for faculty, staff and students.”

The email came exactly two months after the June 3 message in which Brown announced the lifting of capacity limits and physical distancing requirements, and that face coverings would be optional for fully vaccinated people except in instructional spaces, the Cat-Tran and healthcare settings.

On Aug. 4, Haywood Community College began requiring face coverings in indoor spaces where a six-foot social distance cannot be maintained. SCC’s policy went into effect the very next day, Aug. 5, requiring masks indoors at all SCC locations regardless of a person’s vaccination status. The college still plans to keep a full schedule of faceto-face classes this fall.

Free COVID-19 vaccines are available across the region, including at the WCU Clinic. The clinic is open 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday and offers Pfizer and Johnson & Johnson shots. To make an appointment, call 828.227.7640.

Parents petition Haywood school board to require masks

BY HANNAH MCLEOD STAFF WRITER

Apetition to start the school year with universal masking in Haywood County Schools has over 630 signatures. This comes after a July 27 board meeting, when the Haywood County School board voted unanimously to make masking optional for all students, staff and visitors during the 2021-22 school year.

Natasha Bright, a Haywood County Schools parent, started the petition after she was one of only two parents to speak in favor of mandating masks at the July 27 meeting. She knew there were more parents of the same opinion than spoke at that meeting.

“I was there (at the July 27 meeting) last time and I was the only parent there that spoke out. And so I really felt like the argument was very one-sided,” said Bright. “I saw that there were parents who were very concerned. I felt like they should have a voice, so I put the petition out, with the thought that I would present it at the next board meeting so that their voices could be heard.”

Bright, along with several other concerned parents, spoke at the Aug. 9 school board meeting, voicing their fears about returning to school without a mask mandate, especially as COVID-19 cases are rising in the area, due to the delta variant.

The statewide mask mandate for public schools ended on July 30, at which point masking in public schools became a decision for local school boards. In the StrongSchoolsNC Public Health Toolkit, the North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services recommends public schools should require face coverings for all students and staff in grades K-12. This guidance is consistent with that of the CDC, as well as the American Academy of Pediatrics.

In The Smoky Mountain News coverage area, both Swain and Jackson County school boards have voted to begin the school year with a mask mandate.

During the July 27 meeting, Haywood Public Health Director Sarah Henderson and Medical Director Dr. Mark Jaben recommended the board either start the year with the guidelines laid out by North Carolina Health and Human Services or devise standards of transmission and infection rates that would determine the need for temporary mask mandates in the future. However, the board did not discuss what would be done about masks in the future if case counts or transmission rates surged above the margin of safety.

The petition to start the school year with universal masking is directed to Haywood County School Board and Superintendent Dr. Bill Nolte.

“As concerned parents and members of the Haywood County community, we strongly urge you to reconsider your decision to make masks optional in Haywood County Schools. We all must do our part to protect each other from COVID-19 and an overburdened healthcare system, and wearing masks in school is a proven way to do that,” the petition reads.

The document goes on to recognize the important work and flexibility Haywood County School board demonstrated over the past year and a half of the Coronavirus Pandemic. The petition notes the changes in the COVID-19 situation in the short time

since the optional mask decision was made on July 27.

The petition notes that daily COVID-19 cases have significantly increased since the decision on masks at the July 27 meeting. It also cites a COVID-19 cluster at the Canton Police Department, a COVID-19 outbreak among Haywood County Schools staff and at several nursing homes in Haywood County.

According to the Haywood County Public Health Department, the COVID-19 cluster in Haywood County Schools was among maintenance staff. As of Aug. 6, a total of nine positive cases relate to the cluster.

“Wearing masks may be uncomfortable, but if we make them optional, we risk our children and teachers’ health and the rest of the Haywood County Community. We also take the chance that we will have to quarantine large numbers of children, which disrupts their learning and makes it difficult for parents to work and pay their bills,” the petition reads.

Bright said the primary message of the petition is to localize and simplify the issue, by requesting that the school board follow the recommendations of local public health officials.

PUBLIC INPUT

During the Aug. 9 meeting, when the petition to start the school year with universal masking was presented to the board, 11 people spoke in favor of mandating masks. Another eight spoke in support of the decision the board made previously to make masks optional.

Several parents speaking in support of a mask mandate cited recommendations from public health officials, the CDC and the American Academy of Pediatrics, and asked the board to follow this guidance. They also noted that regardless of how anyone feels about wearing a mask, attending school without a mask will mean more close contacts, more quarantining and a more disruptive school year than if masks were required.

“We just want our kids in school. And I’m really nervous. What I want to address a little bit is the 14-day quarantine. If you are a close contact you need to take a 14day quarantine,” said Carrie Brown, a mother of five young children. “It seems to me like a lot of possible 14day quarantines. I don’t want your child to go home for 14 days either. I don’t want our classrooms to be shut down for 14 days. I don’t want our schools to be shut down.” Another father pleaded with the school system to enact a virtual option for immunocompromised students who would be unable to attend school during a pandemic when masks are not required. First, he described the horrors of losing his mother to COVID19, then went on to argue for virtual options.

“It doesn’t do any good to stand here and argue about masks or to convince anyone they should or shouldn’t wear masks. And I’m not going to do that, but I am going to ask the board if they won’t require masks to at least give parents an option. If they do remote learning, like there was last year, right now we have no option,” said Robert Stokely.

The most comical public input, which drew laughs from both sides of the room, was a father who likened the difficulties of wearing a mask to making his young child wear underwear — an inconvenience he requires of his son for the good of everyone in school.

“When it’s time for school, we have a conversation. We say, ‘Eric, got your underwear on?’ ‘Yeah, let me see.’ He goes back to his room, and he puts his underwear on so he can go to school. Now that’s not an infringement upon my son’s liberty. It’s common decency. Now, frankly, him walking through the school naked would probably be less harmful than him walking through the school without a mask,” said Edward Martin.

Parents speaking in support of optional masks used many of the same arguments they had presented at the July 27 meeting, regarding their freedom to dictate whether or not their child will wear a mask.

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