In alignment with the recent guidance from Governor Newsom, State Superintendent of Instruction Tony Thurman, and supported by the Solano County Health Department, the Benicia Unified School District will continue with the distance learning model we started on March 18, 2020, for the duration of this school year. Learning will continue but unfortunately, students and staff will not be returning to campuses during this school year.
We are living in unprecedented and anxious times. With that being said, we want to do everything we can as a school district to protect our students and staff as we fully participate in the effort, of which we are now enlisted, to help flatten the curve of COVID-19. We are deeply appreciative, inspired, and strengthened by the impressive efforts of all staff members in our amazing school district. I want to thank our parent community for their continued support, generosity of spirit and understanding, knowing they are making sacrifices in their daily lives as they balance their many roles.
I also want to acknowledge our brilliant and talented student body. As your superintendent, I’m so sorry to let you know we are closing schools for the remainder of the year. I know you miss your friends, teachers and staff members. We miss you too! Teachers are doing their very best to stay in close contact with you and assure your learning and development continues. We care for you deeply.
As the remainder of the year progresses, we will undoubtedly need to work through challenges as they present themselves. We are enthusiastic about our progress to date and confident our amazing teaching and support staff will continue to engage our students to support their ongoing learning and development.
We recognize that with school closure through the end of the school year many of our most special traditions and memorable events are affected. Student athletics and performing arts will not be held for the remainder of the school year. We also understand this greatly affects our Seniors, the Class of 2020, who have been looking forward to events such as prom and graduation. Please know we are working on alternate plans for the senior activities as well as the transition events for our fifth and eighth graders and will get those details to you in the coming weeks.
We are providing Additional Resources for Home that you can choose to use with your students. Please know the activities on the additional resources document will not be assigned, collected, or graded by teachers, but are optional opportunities. We will continue to update this document as we gather more resources.
Our Food Service Department will continue to provide meals to students, at the same locations and designated times found here until the end of the school year, including Spring Break.
In closing, I sincerely hope all is well in your households. Although this whole experience seems so surreal and trying, I have an overwhelming feeling we are going to get through this united as a society. For me, I know I will have, and already do, an even deeper sense of gratitude and appreciation for all of the many blessings in my life, including getting to serve and work with all of you.
Please be well and know we will continue to update you regularly.
Local writers offer strength, hope, and solidarity in a time of social distancing
Appearing in the print edition of the Benicia Herald, April 1, 2020
Corona
Corona,
halo of death—
a crown
no one wants to wear.
We isolate ourselves in fear—
give up trains and planes—
the touch of a hand,
the embrace of a friend.
We hide under blankets
in unmarked tents,
in the last room
that has a view of the sunset.
The natural world continues—
a hummingbird quivers in the air,
a tree blossoms into luscious green,
a warm breeze rustles the butterflies awake.
Standing 6 feet away
from someone else,
I watch the sun
disappear behind the trees—
each of us crowned
with its light.
Johanna Ely
Two Weeks Ago
my windows were pass-throughs,
outside inviting play in faithful
light of freedom
undistracted frolic
splendor in little fragments
costs nothing to sing in this space
now each day comes with a price
virus unfolding like a crumbled map
roads to new paths uncertain
powerful pivotal ploughs
drops into the unknown
stops any hope.
Stay in social distance
masks to conceal gloves to ensure
eyes reveal hesitation to look
beyond the fear
my mind wants to block
locked like my windows are now
grief begins to cover
as I huddle underneath a fleece blanket.
Two weeks ago
my world now memorized by my heart
must remember must not forget
this is where faith begins.
Suzanne Bruce
Send your poems or short prose to Mary Susan Gast for possible inclusion in this column as we support one another during the coronavirus pandemic. Email to msgast45 at gmail dot com.
Should We All Be Wearing Masks In Public? Health Experts Revisit The Question
KQED, by Huo Jingnan, Allison Aubrey, Carmel Wroth, March 31, 2020
A few months ago, it may have seemed silly to wear a face mask during a trip to the grocery store. And in fact, the mainline public health message in the U.S. from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has been that most people don’t need to wear masks.
But as cases of the coronavirus have skyrocketed, there’s new thinking about the benefits that masks could offer in slowing the spread. The CDC says it is now reviewing its policy and may be considering a recommendation to encourage broader use.
At the moment, the CDC website says the only people who need to wear a face mask are those who are sick or are caring for someone who is sick and unable to wear a mask.
But in an interview with NPR on Monday, CDC Director Robert Redfield said that the agency is taking another look at the data around mask use by the general public.
“I can tell you that the data and this issue of whether it’s going to contribute [to prevention] is being aggressively reviewed as we speak,” Redfield told NPR.
…
prominent public health experts have been raising this issue in recent days. Wearing a mask is “an additional layer of protection for those who have to go out,” former FDA Commissioner Scott Gottlieb told NPR in an interview. It’s a step you can take — on top of washing your hands and avoiding gatherings.
“Face masks will be most effective at slowing the spread of SARS-CoV-2 if they are widely used, because they may help prevent people who are asymptomatically infected from transmitting the disease unknowingly,” Gottlieb wrote. Gottlieb points to South Korea and Hong Kong — two places that were shown to manage their outbreaks successfully and where face masks are used widely.
A prominent public health leader in China also argues for widespread use of masks in public. The director general of the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention, George Gao, told Science that the U.S. and Europe are making a “big mistake” with people not wearing masks during this pandemic. Specifically, he said, mask use helps tamp down the risk presented by people who may be infected but aren’t yet showing symptoms.
If those people wear masks, “it can prevent droplets that carry the virus from escaping and infecting others,” Gao told Science.
The argument for broadening the use of face masks is based on what scientists have learned about asymptomatic spread during this pandemic.
It turns out that many people who are infected with the virus have no symptoms — or only mild symptoms.
What this means is that there’s no good way to know who’s infected. If you’re trying to be responsible when you go out in public, you may not even know that you’re sick and may be inadvertently shedding the virus every time you talk with someone, such as a grocery store clerk.
“If these asymptomatic people could wear face masks, then it could be helpful to reduce the transmission in the community,” says Elaine Shuo Feng, an infectious disease epidemiology researcher at the Oxford Vaccine Group at the University of Oxford.
Given the reality of asymptomatic spread, masks may be a good socially responsible insurance policy, Gottlieb argues. “[Wearing masks] protects other people from getting sick from you,” he says.
But there is still a big concern about mask shortages in the United States. A survey released Friday from the U.S. Conference of Mayors finds that about 92% of 213 cities did not have an adequate supply of face masks for first responders and medical personnel.
At this point, experts emphasize that the general public needs to leave the supply of N95 medical masks to health care workers who are at risk every day when they go to work.
And supplies are also tight for surgical masks, the masks used everywhere from dentists’ offices to nail salons and that are even handcrafted.
“We need to be very mindful that the supply chain for masks is extremely limited right now,” Gottlieb says. “So you really don’t want to pull any kind of medical masks out of the system.”
Given current shortages, it may be too soon to tell the general public to start wearing surgical masks right now. “We certainly don’t have enough masks in health care,” says William Schaffner, an infectious disease expert at Vanderbilt University. “I wouldn’t want people to go out and buy them now, because we don’t want to siphon them off from health care.”
Where does that leave us? Some research has shown that cotton T-shirt material and tea towels might help block respiratory droplets emitting from sick people, even if the effect is minimal.
“Homemade masks, shawls, scarves and anything that you can conjure up at home might well be a good idea,” says Schaffner. “It’s not clear that it’s going to give a lot of protection, but every little bit of protection would help.”
But experts say homemade masks may not be effective if not constructed and handled properly.
That’s why Gottlieb says the CDC should issue guidelines advising people on how to construct their own cotton masks. “Cotton masks constructed in a proper way should provide a reasonable degree of protection from people being able to transmit the virus,” he told NPR.
There’s no definitive evidence from published research that wearing masks in public will protect the person wearing the mask from contracting diseases. In fact, randomized controlled trials — considered the gold standard for testing the effectiveness of an intervention — are limited, and the results from those trials were inconclusive, says Feng.
But Feng points out that randomized clinical trials have not shown significant effects for hand hygiene either. “But for mechanistic reasons, we believe hygiene can be a good way to kill pathogens, and WHO still recommends hand hygiene,” she says.
And those randomized studies were looking at how the face mask could protect the wearer, but what experts are arguing is that face masks may prevent infected but asymptomatic people from transmitting the virus to others. It’s hard to come by data on this point. One meta-analysis reviewing mask use during the SARS epidemic found that wearing masks — in addition to other efforts to block transmission, including hand-washing — was beneficial. Another meta-analysis of mask use to prevent influenza transmission was not conclusive but showed masks possibly help.
The research may not be conclusive, but researchers we interviewed agreed that mask use is better than nothing. “There are some modest data that it will provide some modest protection,” Schaffner says. “And we can use all the protection we can get.”
Concern over presymptomatic spread in the community has also led some hospitals to change their policies and extend the use of masks to nonclinical employees and visitors. Last week, Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston took the unusual step of giving surgical or procedural face masks to all employees who go into the hospital to work, even if they don’t provide care to patients, the hospital’s Infection Control Unit associate chief, Erica Shenoy, told NPR.
“This runs very contrary to what we normally do in infection control,” she says. “But we felt that with the unprecedented nature of the pandemic, this is the right decision at this time.” She says if an employee were to get sick while at work, “the face masks would serve to contain the virus particles and reduce the risk of patients and others working at our facilities.”
On March 29, the University of California, San Francisco, also started giving surgical masks to all staff, faculty, trainees and visitors before they enter any clinical care building within the UCSF system.
Feng cautions that if people do start wearing face masks regularly in public, it is important to wear them properly. She notes that the World Health Organization has a video on how to practice correct hygiene when putting on or taking off a mask.
Saskia Popescu, an infectious disease researcher and biodefense consultant, is skeptical that healthy members of the public need to start wearing masks regularly — she says people should follow current CDC guidelines. But she emphasizes that if you are going to wear a mask, “you have to wear it appropriately.” That means, she says, “you have to discard it when it gets damp or moist. You want to stop touching the front of it. Don’t reach under to scratch your nose or mouth.”
Otherwise, she warns, wearing masks could give “a false sense of security.”
Americans across the country, many of whom are facing dire financial situations amid the COVID-19 crisis, are eagerly awaiting payment from the federal government’s stimulus package.
In fact, if unemployment spikes in California and the United States are any indication, the situation is urgent for millions.
But in the past, those payments have taken weeks or months to arrive. The last time there was a stimulus agreement, in 2008, checks weren’t sent for three months after President George W. Bush signed the bill.
So how can those who really need their stimulus share make sure they get it as soon as possible? The Internal Revenue Service, which will distribute the payments, has some tips.
A refresher: Those who made $75,000 or less on their most recent tax filing will receive the full $1,200 payment. That threshold doubles for joint-filing couples, and parents will receive an additional $500 per child. The stimulus payment decreases by $5 for each $100 above each threshold.
The IRS will deposit the stimulus money directly into your bank account if you have previously set up direct deposit for tax refunds. For those who don’t have that arranged yet, the U.S. Treasury is planning to unveil a web-based portal where recipients can set up direct deposit and avoid wasting time by waiting for a check in the mail.
In the meantime, it may be worth looking at your bank records to double check if you have received a tax rebate via direct deposit or if it came via check.
The IRS will use 2019 tax forms to determine eligibility and sort out where to send the money. If you haven’t filed your 2019 taxes yet (the federal deadline was extended to July 15, by the way), then the IRS will use 2018 filings.
Some people, such as low-income residents and senior citizens, may not have been required to file taxes in the last two years. For them, the IRS expects to soon provide information on its website.
Even if you were supposed to file 2018 tax forms last year and missed it, you are entitled to the economic stimulus.
The IRS is urging people in that position to file as soon as possible (and maybe take care of 2019 while you’re at it). When you’re filing, you should include direct deposit information to speed up the process.
If you’re not able to file immediately, the IRS says the stimulus will be available through the rest of 2020.
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