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Maine schools look toward reopening with fewer coronavirus disruptions this fall

Simplified CDC guidelines point to shorter isolation, quarantine periods

Maine schools look toward reopening with fewer coronavirus disruptions this fall

Simplified CDC guidelines point to shorter isolation, quarantine periods

WHEN SCHOOLS START TO REOPEN LATER THIS MONTH, THERE WILL BE FEWER CORONAVIRUS PRECAUTIONS... COMPARED TO LAST FALL. FOR ONE, A HIGHER RATE OF STUDENTS AND ADULTS ARE VACCINATED. AND AS W-M-T-W NEWS-8'S PHIL HIRSCHKORN REPORTS... SCHOOLS BELIEVE THEY HAVE LEARNED TO MANAGE THE RISKS. EXEC. DIR., MAINE SCHOOL SUPERINTENDENTS ASSOCIATION (PHIL STANDUP OPEN) "MAINE PUBLIC SCHOOLS ARE PREPARING TO RE- OPEN WITH NEW CORONAVIRUS PROTOCOLS, NO MASK MANDATES, AND LESSONS LEARNED ON HOW TO KEEP SCHOOLS OPEN." (VO 1: TWO SHOT HEATHER & PHIL) LIKE ALL 248 DISTRICTS, GORHAM WILL BE MASK OPTIONAL. (SOT HEATHER PERRY, SUPERINTENDENT, GORHAM PUBLIC SCHOOLS, 1:11:11) "WE'VE LEARNED A LOT ABOUT COVID AND HOW IT SPREADS, AND HOW TO MITIGATE THE SPREAD, AND WE DON'T SEE THE NEED FOR THAT SPECIFIC, DETAILED, PHYSICAL DISTANCING THAT USED TO BE THERE." (VO 2: GORHAM CLASSROOMS, CAFETERIA, LIBRARY) CLASSROOMS ARE REOPENING FIVE DAYS A WEEK AT FULL CAPACITY. SAME AS CAFETERIAS,. SIMPLIFIED C-D-C GUIDELINES MEAN NO MORE POOL TESTING., AND ANYONE WHO TESTS POSITIVE MAY ISOLATE ONLY FIVE DAYS. CHASING CLOSE CONTACTS STOPPED IN JANUARY. (SOT HEATHER PERRY, SUPERINTENDENT, GORHAM PUBLIC SCHOOLS, 1:09:43) "WE'RE GOING TO CONTINUE THAT PRACTICE OF NOT CONTACT TRACING AS WE OPEN THE SCHOOL YEAR THIS YEAR." (NEW VO 3: SCHOOLS) THE MAINE DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATON RECOMMENDS VACCINATIONS, TESTING, STAYING HOME WHEN SICK, REINFORCING PROPER HYGIENE, AND OPTIMIZING VENTILATION. MAINE 710 SCHOOLS -- AND ITS COLLEGES -- SPENT SOME OF THEIR COLLECTIVE 890 MILLION DOLLARS IN FEDERAL CORONAVIRUS AID ON IMPROVING AIR QUALITY. (NEW SOT EILEEN KING, EXEC. DIR., MAINE SCHOOL PRINCIPALS ASSOCIATION, 9:40) "OUR HOPE IS TO OPEN SCHOOL IN THE MOST NORMAL WAY POSSIBLE." (NEW VO 4: TWO SHOT EILEEN AND PHIL) BUT THE SUPERINTENDENT'S ASSOCIATION SAYS STAFF SHORTAGES REMAIN A CONCERN. (SOT EILEEN KING, EXEC. DIR., MAINE SCHOOL PRINCIPALS ASSOCIATION, 8:11 -- COVER END WITH BUSES) "WE HAD OUR NEW SUPERINTENDENTS' ORIENTATION YESTERDAY. MANY WERE REPORTING THAT THEIR CLASSROOM POSITIONS WERE FOR THE MOST PART FILLED, BUT THEIR SUPPORT STAFF POSITIONS AND SCHOOL BUS DRIVERS WERE THE ONES THAT THEY'RE REALLY CONTINUING TO LOOK AT." (PHIL STANDUP CLOSE) "LAST SCHOOL YEAR WAS FILLED WITH DISRUPTIONS - LONG QUARANTINES FOR STUDENTS AND TEACHERS WHO TESTED POSITIVE FOR COVID AND THEIR CLOSE CONTACTS. EDUCATORS EXPECT THIS YE
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Maine schools look toward reopening with fewer coronavirus disruptions this fall

Simplified CDC guidelines point to shorter isolation, quarantine periods

Maine public schools are preparing to reopen with new coronavirus protocols, no mask mandates, and lessons learned on how to keep schools open.In the fall term, unlike last year, all 248 public school districts are expected to be mask optional."We've learned a lot about COVID and how it spreads, and how to mitigate the spread, and we don't see the need for that specific, detailed, physical distancing that used to be there," said Heather Perry, superintendent of the Gorham Public Schools.Long gone are the social distancing arrangements dating back to the hybrid days of the 2020-2021 school year.Classrooms are reopening five days a week, as they did last academic year, at full capacity, as are cafeterias.Simplified guidelines from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention mean no more pool testing, and anyone who tests positive for COVID-19 may be able to return to school after only five days of isolation.Chasing close contacts – and the resulting mandatory quarantines typical last year – stopped last spring."We're going to continue that practice of not contact tracing as we open the school year this year," Perry said.The Maine Department of Education terminated its standard operating procedure for coronavirus on June 30. Maine Department of Education still recommends vaccinations, testing, staying home when sick, reinforcing proper hygiene and optimizing ventilation. Maine 710 schools — and its colleges — spent a significant portion of their collective $890 million in federal coronavirus aid on improving air quality.“Number one, the most important thing is to keep our students and our staff safe,” said Eileen King, executive director, Maine School Superintendents Association. "Our hope is to open school in the most normal way possible."But for Maine School Superintendents Association’s 130 superintendents, staff shortages remain a concern."We had our new superintendents' orientation yesterday," King said. "Many were reporting that their classroom positions were for the most part filled, but their support staff positions and school bus drivers were the ones that they're really continuing to look at."King said some schools are restructuring their start times to allow bus drivers more time to get students to and from school.Educators expect fewer pandemic disruptions in the coming year.“I think we’ve learned a lot more about how to live with it on a daily basis and still operate schools and keep them open even while going through things like outbreaks," Perry said.

Maine public schools are preparing to reopen with new coronavirus protocols, no mask mandates, and lessons learned on how to keep schools open.

In the fall term, unlike last year, all 248 public school districts are expected to be mask optional.

"We've learned a lot about COVID and how it spreads, and how to mitigate the spread, and we don't see the need for that specific, detailed, physical distancing that used to be there," said Heather Perry, superintendent of the Gorham Public Schools.

Long gone are the social distancing arrangements dating back to the hybrid days of the 2020-2021 school year.

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Classrooms are reopening five days a week, as they did last academic year, at full capacity, as are cafeterias.

Simplified guidelines from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention mean no more pool testing, and anyone who tests positive for COVID-19 may be able to return to school after only five days of isolation.

Chasing close contacts – and the resulting mandatory quarantines typical last year – stopped last spring.

"We're going to continue that practice of not contact tracing as we open the school year this year," Perry said.

The Maine Department of Education terminated its standard operating procedure for coronavirus on June 30.

Maine Department of Education still recommends vaccinations, testing, staying home when sick, reinforcing proper hygiene and optimizing ventilation.

Maine 710 schools — and its colleges — spent a significant portion of their collective $890 million in federal coronavirus aid on improving air quality.

“Number one, the most important thing is to keep our students and our staff safe,” said Eileen King, executive director, Maine School Superintendents Association. "Our hope is to open school in the most normal way possible."

But for Maine School Superintendents Association’s 130 superintendents, staff shortages remain a concern.

"We had our new superintendents' orientation yesterday," King said. "Many were reporting that their classroom positions were for the most part filled, but their support staff positions and school bus drivers were the ones that they're really continuing to look at."

King said some schools are restructuring their start times to allow bus drivers more time to get students to and from school.

Educators expect fewer pandemic disruptions in the coming year.

“I think we’ve learned a lot more about how to live with it on a daily basis and still operate schools and keep them open even while going through things like outbreaks," Perry said.