NYC
to limit classroom closures, prioritize ramped-up testing for schools
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[December 29, 2021]
By Kanishka Singh
(Reuters) - New York City will stop
quarantining entire classrooms exposed to the coronavirus and will
instead prioritize a ramped-up testing program so that asymptomatic
students testing negative for COVID-19 can remain in school, officials
said on Tuesday.
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A day earlier, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
(CDC) shortened the recommended isolation time for Americans with
asymptomatic cases of COVID-19 to five days from the previous
guidance of 10 days.
President Joe Biden has pledged to ease a shortage of COVID-19 tests
with the Omicron variant threatening to overwhelm hospitals and
stifle travel plans as it spreads across the country this holiday
week.
The Omicron variant was estimated to be 58.6% of the coronavirus
variants circulating in the United States as of Dec. 25, CDC data
showed on Tuesday.
Mayor Bill de Blasio described New York's new policy as "Stay Safe,
and Stay Open" and said it will take effect on Jan. 3. About a
million New York City public school students are scheduled to return
from holiday break on Monday.
New York City Mayor-elect Eric Adams, de Blasio and New York
Governor Kathy Hochul made the announcements at a news conference.
New York City aims to detect more infections while mitigating
disruptions as officials described remote learning as "a failed
experiment."
The city's previous policy was to quarantine unvaccinated close
contacts of infected students for 10 days.
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Instead of sending classes of unvaccinated students home to learn
online when a student tests positive, the students will be given
rapid at-home tests. If they are asymptomatic and test negative,
they can return the day after their first negative test.
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 Students will be given a second
at-home test within seven days of their
exposure, according to the announcement.
The step raised some concerns among parents. One
tweeted that schools should be kept remote for
at least a week's cushion following potential
holiday gathering and travel exposure.
Others called for mandatory testing for all
children, as well as school employees.
Broadway's revival of "The Music Man," the
hottest ticket in town, on Tuesday canceled
performances for five days after star Hugh
Jackman tested positive for COVID, becoming the
latest New York City show to fall victim to the
surging coronavirus.
New York will also sharply limit the number of
people it allows in Times Square for its New
Year's Eve celebration.
Separately, Biden on Tuesday revoked a
proclamation put in place last month that
imposed travel restrictions on eight southern
African nations, including South Africa, after
the emergence of the Omicron variant.
(Reporting by Kanishka Singh in Bengaluru;
Editing by Dan Grebler)
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