So the attorney general of the state of Texas issued a finding this past week saying that local health authorities have no authority to mandate school closures. Previously the Texas Education Agency (state agency regulating schools, disbursing funds, etc.) said that if schools remain closed under a local health authority then they'll still get funding. After the attorney general's finding, TEA reversed course and said if schools do not offer in-person education for those that request it they will not get funding.
Soooo that's great ya know.
Well the superintendant of one of the public San Antonio school districts on the news went "okay sure and we will sue you and see you in court"
I wish the local school districts in my area had tried to stand up to it instead of just going, "Well, I guess we're opening 100% in person on day 1!"
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OrcaAlso known as EspressosaurusWrexRegistered Userregular
One of the first school districts in the U.S. to reopen its doors during the pandemic did not even make it a day before a call came from the county health department — a student who had walked the halls and sat in various classrooms had tested positive https://t.co/gTmeoCjZkW
from the article:
Just hours into the first day of classes on Thursday, a call from the county health department notified Greenfield Central Junior High School in Indiana that a student who had walked the halls and sat in various classrooms had tested positive for the coronavirus.
so.
yeah.
What kind of monster school department starts school on August 1st?
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AtomikaLive fast and get fucked or whateverRegistered Userregular
One of the first school districts in the U.S. to reopen its doors during the pandemic did not even make it a day before a call came from the county health department — a student who had walked the halls and sat in various classrooms had tested positive https://t.co/gTmeoCjZkW
from the article:
Just hours into the first day of classes on Thursday, a call from the county health department notified Greenfield Central Junior High School in Indiana that a student who had walked the halls and sat in various classrooms had tested positive for the coronavirus.
so.
yeah.
What kind of monster school department starts school on August 1st?
The whole thing is crazy, because in media you pick and choose word choice carefully to avoid this kind of thing. But here we are, even worse, phrasing wearing ppe during a pandemic as a "debate" for some god awful reason to promote neutrality or controversy on something very clear.
A Delta flight was forced to return to the gate when two of their customers wouldn’t wear masks, according to Delta Air Lines spokesperson Emma Protis.
Protis told CNN in an email that Flight 1227 on July 23 was on its way from Detroit to Atlanta when they were forced to turn around.
Delta released the following statement to CNN:
"Flight 1227 from Detroit to Atlanta returned to the gate following two customers who were non-compliant with crew instructions. After a short delay, the aircraft departed to Atlanta.""
The two passengers were removed from the plane, Protis said.
According to Delta's website, "Delta customers and employees are required to wear a face mask, or appropriate cloth face covering over their nose and mouth throughout their travel, aligning with best practice guidelines from the CDC."
I'm surprised they even left the gate before making sure everyone had masks on.
Probably took them off once the plane was in the air. Probably thought it was like a road trip and no matter what they the adult wouldn't actually follow through with don't make me turn this around threat.
Yeah. Lotta people seem to think flight attendants are like waiters or waitresses.
I mean, they do that too, but they're also there for emergencies. You either obey them or you will regret it. They can, and will, turn this plane right around young man!
Yeah, you kinda hope they follow through with the implied threat of prosecution in their initial safety announcement, but it being federal aviation safety law... *looks at who is ultimately responsible for federal law in the country* I'm not counting on it.
Unless that is completely outside his jurisdiction and he chooses not to ignore that it's completely outside his jurisdiction.
The whole thing is crazy, because in media you pick and choose word choice carefully to avoid this kind of thing. But here we are, even worse, phrasing wearing ppe during a pandemic as a "debate" for some god awful reason to promote neutrality or controversy on something very clear.
They just have so much faith that they are cunning linguists
Worth noting: Among the drugs Kodak initially will focus on will be hydroxychloroquine, the malaria drug that Trump has repeatedly pushed as a coronavirus treatment but that scientists say can cause harm.
Harvard’s Frank said that while increased domestic drug production may be prudent from a national security perspective, tapping a company with little pharmaceutical experience as your backstop doesn’t make a lot of sense.
“There’s a lot more to it than just knowing chemical engineering,” he said. “You need to know the suppliers. You need to know the regulatory structure. You need to know the distribution network.”
Anirban Basu, a professor of health economics at the University of Washington, said it’s hard to understand why drug companies would purchase higher-priced ingredients from Kodak, “unless the government puts out a regulation forcing them to do so.”
That’s definitely not something Trump is proposing, or that any Republican lawmaker would support.
Of freaking course. This is definitely going to crash and burn.
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FencingsaxIt is difficult to get a man to understand, when his salary depends upon his not understandingGNU Terry PratchettRegistered Userregular
The Kodak thing is so nakedly corrupt that I'm actually surprised, I didn't think that was possible for me anymore.
...mostly, I think, because there seem to be so many other people involved in obvious ways who shouldn't expect (I would hope) to be protected against consequences come the next administration.
Worth noting: Among the drugs Kodak initially will focus on will be hydroxychloroquine, the malaria drug that Trump has repeatedly pushed as a coronavirus treatment but that scientists say can cause harm.
Harvard’s Frank said that while increased domestic drug production may be prudent from a national security perspective, tapping a company with little pharmaceutical experience as your backstop doesn’t make a lot of sense.
“There’s a lot more to it than just knowing chemical engineering,” he said. “You need to know the suppliers. You need to know the regulatory structure. You need to know the distribution network.”
Anirban Basu, a professor of health economics at the University of Washington, said it’s hard to understand why drug companies would purchase higher-priced ingredients from Kodak, “unless the government puts out a regulation forcing them to do so.”
That’s definitely not something Trump is proposing, or that any Republican lawmaker would support.
Of freaking course. This is definitely going to crash and burn.
My question is which Trump family member or business associate has the stake in the drug.
League of Legends: Sorakanmyworld
FFXIV: Tchel Fay
Nintendo ID: Tortalius
Steam: Tortalius
Stream: twitch.tv/tortalius
FujiFilm had to buy out some companies to to use its patents and chemical expertise to enter the medical market. I am not sure how the husk of Kodak can do that without something similar.
Hell, Kodak even sold its Healthcare Imaging branch in 2007 to shove more money into comeras.
Couscous on
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ElldrenIs a woman dammitceterum censeoRegistered Userregular
One of the first school districts in the U.S. to reopen its doors during the pandemic did not even make it a day before a call came from the county health department — a student who had walked the halls and sat in various classrooms had tested positive https://t.co/gTmeoCjZkW
from the article:
Just hours into the first day of classes on Thursday, a call from the county health department notified Greenfield Central Junior High School in Indiana that a student who had walked the halls and sat in various classrooms had tested positive for the coronavirus.
so.
yeah.
What kind of monster school department starts school on August 1st?
All throughout the South and Southwest
Why?
I went to the high school in NH that prided itself for being the first in the state to open, and that was only a few days - 3-5 - before Labor Day. Done for both the PR - it was a semi-private academy - and to (hopefully) offset the average number of snow days we'd get so the school year could still end in early-to-mid June.
Why would anyone make kids go to school during summer in regions where summer can be persistently oppressively hot?
Take Louisiana for example, summer break is usually sometime latter in May to early August, varies some. Even LSU is begging of May to mid August. If you want kids out of school when its not hot and humid as fuck outside most of time, may as well make breaks around late March-mid April and October. So unless you do go to year round schedule, when in the summer it is make no difference. Its a good chance to be 85-90+ most days with 70-90% humidity no matter when you pick from late April to mid September.
It was interesting and I know a few things about this and I still learned a lot.
The tracing of the RNA of modern influenza to 1918 is fascinating. And the fact that if you want to really do a trace 1918 has been killing people for 102 years now.
I have a general question for the group. My family's been doing what we can to maintain social distancing, but every couple of weeks, we've met for a meal outside. We've gone to my mom's house to use their multi-level deck, with my mom and I on both sides of the top level and my brother's family on the lower level. We've been pretty careful, using masks whenever we have to get too close. That said, my mom in particular is getting a little antsy and is wondering if it would be possible to eat inside the house sometimes, especially as the weather gets worse. We'd still be careful, keeping families to two separate couches, but I'm not sure about the prospect.
On one hand, we're in Illinois, so it's better than a lot of other states have it, and we've avoided most of the obvious risks so far. On the other hand, I've had to return to work in an office 4/5 days, and my niece and nephew may have to return to school at the end of the month (I think Illinois in general still hasn't fully committed to a school plan.) What do you think I should do? How should I talk to my mom about this?
You know what? Nanowrimo's cancelled on account of the world is stupid.
I have a general question for the group. My family's been doing what we can to maintain social distancing, but every couple of weeks, we've met for a meal outside. We've gone to my mom's house to use their multi-level deck, with my mom and I on both sides of the top level and my brother's family on the lower level. We've been pretty careful, using masks whenever we have to get too close. That said, my mom in particular is getting a little antsy and is wondering if it would be possible to eat inside the house sometimes, especially as the weather gets worse. We'd still be careful, keeping families to two separate couches, but I'm not sure about the prospect.
On one hand, we're in Illinois, so it's better than a lot of other states have it, and we've avoided most of the obvious risks so far. On the other hand, I've had to return to work in an office 4/5 days, and my niece and nephew may have to return to school at the end of the month (I think Illinois in general still hasn't fully committed to a school plan.) What do you think I should do? How should I talk to my mom about this?
Eating inside seems to be a particular risk, because there's no way to do it with a mask on. Is it necessary for this to be a meal, or can it just be a meetup where everyone wears a mask?
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Ninja Snarl PMy helmet is my burden.Ninja Snarl: Gone, but not forgotten.Registered Userregular
One of the first school districts in the U.S. to reopen its doors during the pandemic did not even make it a day before a call came from the county health department — a student who had walked the halls and sat in various classrooms had tested positive https://t.co/gTmeoCjZkW
from the article:
Just hours into the first day of classes on Thursday, a call from the county health department notified Greenfield Central Junior High School in Indiana that a student who had walked the halls and sat in various classrooms had tested positive for the coronavirus.
so.
yeah.
What kind of monster school department starts school on August 1st?
All throughout the South and Southwest
Why?
I went to the high school in NH that prided itself for being the first in the state to open, and that was only a few days - 3-5 - before Labor Day. Done for both the PR - it was a semi-private academy - and to (hopefully) offset the average number of snow days we'd get so the school year could still end in early-to-mid June.
Why would anyone make kids go to school during summer in regions where summer can be persistently oppressively hot?
School years getting longer and summers getting shorter has been an issue for a long time now. As teachers are expected to take on growing class sizes with inadequate materials, the response has been to add more school days to cover all the material.
But the folks running the education system habitually ignores the needs of the students anyway. I mean, we've known for how long now that kicking teenagers out of bed at five or six in the morning to go class starting at 7:30AM is nightmarishly horrible to them and a huge waste of effort? Yet that shit is still happening so they can cram more athletics time into afternoons without having to pay for lighting, even though we've known better for something like 30 years.
I have a general question for the group. My family's been doing what we can to maintain social distancing, but every couple of weeks, we've met for a meal outside. We've gone to my mom's house to use their multi-level deck, with my mom and I on both sides of the top level and my brother's family on the lower level. We've been pretty careful, using masks whenever we have to get too close. That said, my mom in particular is getting a little antsy and is wondering if it would be possible to eat inside the house sometimes, especially as the weather gets worse. We'd still be careful, keeping families to two separate couches, but I'm not sure about the prospect.
On one hand, we're in Illinois, so it's better than a lot of other states have it, and we've avoided most of the obvious risks so far. On the other hand, I've had to return to work in an office 4/5 days, and my niece and nephew may have to return to school at the end of the month (I think Illinois in general still hasn't fully committed to a school plan.) What do you think I should do? How should I talk to my mom about this?
I mean, being inside with others for an extended period is risky. Eating, which inherently involves spraying saliva particles everywhere, is more risky. If you stay far apart and have good air ventilation and wear masks except when you're actually eating, it lowers the risk somewhat, but doesn't eliminate it. (To be fair, eating outdoors doesn't eliminate the risk either, it just lowers it further.)
Personally, I wouldn't feel comfortable with that level of risk, but I'm not you, I don't know your personal situation, and I'm not going to judge either way.
Basically, sitting in your house far away from everyone and never leaving for any reason makes your risk effectively zero. Any variation from that behavior adds risk. Some added risks are small, some are larger. The ones you suggest are on the larger side, but it's not at the same level as, like, going to an indoor restaurant or a gym.
I submitted an entry to Lego Ideas, and if 10,000 people support me, it'll be turned into an actual Lego set!If you'd like to see and support my submission, follow this link.
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SteevLWhat can I do for you?Registered Userregular
I've chosen to eat my meals in my car during my breaks at work. Early on I was eating in our breakroom, but I just don't feel comfortable eating in there now, especially when there are 2-3 other people also eating. Everyone's socially distanced, but it still seems like an unnecessary risk.
We've started having issues with people coming into the library who aren't wearing their masks properly. The most common one is the person wearing it over their mouth, but not their nose. Most people will bring it up when asked to do so, but we had one guy who claimed he "can't breathe" when it's on that way. In cases like that, we're supposed to say we can only assist them from behind our plexiglass shield at our desk. It's probably only a matter of time before we get an outbreak, though.
Sort of related to this current tangent, how are people handling their masks during lunch at work? I go back to work at a school tomorrow and typically I've had my lunch in my office, sometimes going to grab it out of a mini fridge. But I am under the impression that removing the mask is generally not something I want to be doing all that often, so what's the best plan there, other than just not eating until I get home? (which I may just end up doing because I'm anxious as hell)
Sort of related to this current tangent, how are people handling their masks during lunch at work? I go back to work at a school tomorrow and typically I've had my lunch in my office, sometimes going to grab it out of a mini fridge. But I am under the impression that removing the mask is generally not something I want to be doing all that often, so what's the best plan there, other than just not eating until I get home? (which I may just end up doing because I'm anxious as hell)
Surprised you don't have lunch supervision duties given the obvious dangers of a cafeteria.
School have a courtyard or something? That'd be my best advice as long as the weather is even vaguely tolerable.
Self-righteousness is incompatible with coalition building.
i'm lucky, in that i work somewhere large and the night shift is way smaller than the day shift, so i can just eat lunch 15 feet away from everyone else.
if you mean the physical routine:
drop lunch at lunch spot -> remove gloves, wash hands -> move back to lunch spot -> open lunchbox (i only touch the zipper/interior with clean hands)
-> eat lunch with clean hands, only putting stuff down inside the lunchbox, which is clean -> finish, close lunchbox -> put on new gloves.
We now have an 8pm curfew in our area, basically because the government looked at the statistics and realized that most transmissions at the moment are "community transmissions" i.e, its happening in people's homes rather than in gyms and cafes.
Which I'm all in favor of if it makes it easier for the authorities to spot the shit-heads still not following the rules, but I certainly didn't have "mandatory curfew, enforced by the actual goddamn army" on my 2020 bingo card.
Sort of related to this current tangent, how are people handling their masks during lunch at work? I go back to work at a school tomorrow and typically I've had my lunch in my office, sometimes going to grab it out of a mini fridge. But I am under the impression that removing the mask is generally not something I want to be doing all that often, so what's the best plan there, other than just not eating until I get home? (which I may just end up doing because I'm anxious as hell)
Surprised you don't have lunch supervision duties given the obvious dangers of a cafeteria.
School have a courtyard or something? That'd be my best advice as long as the weather is even vaguely tolerable.
I have my own tiny office, I'm the tech guy and a teacher, so I don't have lunch duty thankfully. I can easily stay away from people, in just wondering what to do with my mask while I eat. New mask after I eat? Gonna have to do laundry pretty often to wash em. Where do I put it? Just flat on a table?
Sort of related to this current tangent, how are people handling their masks during lunch at work? I go back to work at a school tomorrow and typically I've had my lunch in my office, sometimes going to grab it out of a mini fridge. But I am under the impression that removing the mask is generally not something I want to be doing all that often, so what's the best plan there, other than just not eating until I get home? (which I may just end up doing because I'm anxious as hell)
Surprised you don't have lunch supervision duties given the obvious dangers of a cafeteria.
School have a courtyard or something? That'd be my best advice as long as the weather is even vaguely tolerable.
I have my own tiny office, I'm the tech guy and a teacher, so I don't have lunch duty thankfully. I can easily stay away from people, in just wondering what to do with my mask while I eat. New mask after I eat? Gonna have to do laundry pretty often to wash em. Where do I put it? Just flat on a table?
I mean, chinstrapping or going fighter-pilot style* are kind of the two main methods I've seen
We now have an 8pm curfew in our area, basically because the government looked at the statistics and realized that most transmissions at the moment are "community transmissions" i.e, its happening in people's homes rather than in gyms and cafes.
Which I'm all in favor of if it makes it easier for the authorities to spot the shit-heads still not following the rules, but I certainly didn't have "mandatory curfew, enforced by the actual goddamn army" on my 2020 bingo card.
Wait you have open gyms and a military curfew?
How are they demonstrating that people are definitely transmitting this at a bunch of 9PM house parties and not the gym or cafe?
Curfew is pretty awful, and really fucks over people with no home to return to. I feel like at a minimum no indoor intense breathing spaces is a step before it.
So I have seen the writting on the wall and bought face masks today, even though Norway never mandated them(except on trains and airplanes).
Once the second wave hits I suspect that its going to become mandatory to wear them outside your home, so I bought mine early to beat the rush.
I have been wearing a mask while training at the gym, but that was actually not for virus control issues. That difficulty to breath thing the anti-maskers talk about? Sounded like a great way to increase your cardio while lifting, so I figured I would give it a try. Uncomfortable, but it was great training for actually having to wear a mask day to day.
The sky was full of stars, every star an exploding ship. One of ours.
There are currently "no plans" to delay or cancel New York Comic Con. I just went to their site on a whim because I read something about it and I'm like no way that petri dish isn't canceled this year right? I'm pretty sure everyone gets sick at that thing anyway, COVID or not.
There are currently "no plans" to delay or cancel New York Comic Con. I just went to their site on a whim because I read something about it and I'm like no way that petri dish isn't canceled this year right? I'm pretty sure everyone gets sick at that thing anyway, COVID or not.
Nope. Still supposedly happening.
What a bunch of fucking goobers.
Yeah, that seems incredibly unlikely. I'd guess they're waiting until they are forced, by law, to cancel for contract reasons.
There are currently "no plans" to delay or cancel New York Comic Con. I just went to their site on a whim because I read something about it and I'm like no way that petri dish isn't canceled this year right? I'm pretty sure everyone gets sick at that thing anyway, COVID or not.
Nope. Still supposedly happening.
What a bunch of fucking goobers.
Yeah, that seems incredibly unlikely. I'd guess they're waiting until they are forced, by law, to cancel for contract reasons.
Yeah, supposedly if they cancel themselves, they're on the hook for everything, but if the government tells them to cancel, they're able to get it of some liability
Sort of related to this current tangent, how are people handling their masks during lunch at work? I go back to work at a school tomorrow and typically I've had my lunch in my office, sometimes going to grab it out of a mini fridge. But I am under the impression that removing the mask is generally not something I want to be doing all that often, so what's the best plan there, other than just not eating until I get home? (which I may just end up doing because I'm anxious as hell)
Surprised you don't have lunch supervision duties given the obvious dangers of a cafeteria.
School have a courtyard or something? That'd be my best advice as long as the weather is even vaguely tolerable.
I have my own tiny office, I'm the tech guy and a teacher, so I don't have lunch duty thankfully. I can easily stay away from people, in just wondering what to do with my mask while I eat. New mask after I eat? Gonna have to do laundry pretty often to wash em. Where do I put it? Just flat on a table?
I mean, chinstrapping or going fighter-pilot style* are kind of the two main methods I've seen
*
@SniperGuy Don't do the chinstrapping thing. It infects the inside of the mask with whatever is on your chin/neck. I'd probably to remove it, fold it in half so that the interior (the part facing your mouth is clamshelled inside), and place it inside its own container or bag. Ideally, of course, you'd get a new mask, but I think it's reasonable to just remove the mask during lunch if you have your own lunch space and put it back on afterwards.
Posts
I wish the local school districts in my area had tried to stand up to it instead of just going, "Well, I guess we're opening 100% in person on day 1!"
What kind of monster school department starts school on August 1st?
All throughout the South and Southwest
The whole thing is crazy, because in media you pick and choose word choice carefully to avoid this kind of thing. But here we are, even worse, phrasing wearing ppe during a pandemic as a "debate" for some god awful reason to promote neutrality or controversy on something very clear.
Yeah, you kinda hope they follow through with the implied threat of prosecution in their initial safety announcement, but it being federal aviation safety law... *looks at who is ultimately responsible for federal law in the country* I'm not counting on it.
Unless that is completely outside his jurisdiction and he chooses not to ignore that it's completely outside his jurisdiction.
They just have so much faith that they are cunning linguists
Amazing how Trump cannot help but attack support for basic virus containment measures
...mostly, I think, because there seem to be so many other people involved in obvious ways who shouldn't expect (I would hope) to be protected against consequences come the next administration.
My question is which Trump family member or business associate has the stake in the drug.
FFXIV: Tchel Fay
Nintendo ID: Tortalius
Steam: Tortalius
Stream: twitch.tv/tortalius
Hell, Kodak even sold its Healthcare Imaging branch in 2007 to shove more money into comeras.
It's important to note who is making that tweet.
Richard Grenell is the former acting DNI and former Ambassador to Germany who was very nearly PNG'd out due to being a shit
Also an utterly incompetent right wing media hack but that kind of goes without saying in this administration
Why?
I went to the high school in NH that prided itself for being the first in the state to open, and that was only a few days - 3-5 - before Labor Day. Done for both the PR - it was a semi-private academy - and to (hopefully) offset the average number of snow days we'd get so the school year could still end in early-to-mid June.
Why would anyone make kids go to school during summer in regions where summer can be persistently oppressively hot?
Law and Order ≠ Justice
ACNH Island Isla Cero: DA-3082-2045-4142
Captain of the SES Comptroller of the State
Not sure from the pandemic but there were ones around me in Colorado growing up that had.
Well.
Clearly we need to start a campaign to get anti-maskers proudly calling themselves mask debaters.
Ideally, a reporter asking the president, "Mr. President, you've questioned the efficacy of masks in the past. Would you say you are a mask debater?"
Dispatches from 1918
It was interesting and I know a few things about this and I still learned a lot.
The tracing of the RNA of modern influenza to 1918 is fascinating. And the fact that if you want to really do a trace 1918 has been killing people for 102 years now.
On one hand, we're in Illinois, so it's better than a lot of other states have it, and we've avoided most of the obvious risks so far. On the other hand, I've had to return to work in an office 4/5 days, and my niece and nephew may have to return to school at the end of the month (I think Illinois in general still hasn't fully committed to a school plan.) What do you think I should do? How should I talk to my mom about this?
Eating inside seems to be a particular risk, because there's no way to do it with a mask on. Is it necessary for this to be a meal, or can it just be a meetup where everyone wears a mask?
School years getting longer and summers getting shorter has been an issue for a long time now. As teachers are expected to take on growing class sizes with inadequate materials, the response has been to add more school days to cover all the material.
But the folks running the education system habitually ignores the needs of the students anyway. I mean, we've known for how long now that kicking teenagers out of bed at five or six in the morning to go class starting at 7:30AM is nightmarishly horrible to them and a huge waste of effort? Yet that shit is still happening so they can cram more athletics time into afternoons without having to pay for lighting, even though we've known better for something like 30 years.
I mean, being inside with others for an extended period is risky. Eating, which inherently involves spraying saliva particles everywhere, is more risky. If you stay far apart and have good air ventilation and wear masks except when you're actually eating, it lowers the risk somewhat, but doesn't eliminate it. (To be fair, eating outdoors doesn't eliminate the risk either, it just lowers it further.)
Personally, I wouldn't feel comfortable with that level of risk, but I'm not you, I don't know your personal situation, and I'm not going to judge either way.
Basically, sitting in your house far away from everyone and never leaving for any reason makes your risk effectively zero. Any variation from that behavior adds risk. Some added risks are small, some are larger. The ones you suggest are on the larger side, but it's not at the same level as, like, going to an indoor restaurant or a gym.
We've started having issues with people coming into the library who aren't wearing their masks properly. The most common one is the person wearing it over their mouth, but not their nose. Most people will bring it up when asked to do so, but we had one guy who claimed he "can't breathe" when it's on that way. In cases like that, we're supposed to say we can only assist them from behind our plexiglass shield at our desk. It's probably only a matter of time before we get an outbreak, though.
My Backloggery
Surprised you don't have lunch supervision duties given the obvious dangers of a cafeteria.
School have a courtyard or something? That'd be my best advice as long as the weather is even vaguely tolerable.
if you mean the physical routine:
drop lunch at lunch spot -> remove gloves, wash hands -> move back to lunch spot -> open lunchbox (i only touch the zipper/interior with clean hands)
-> eat lunch with clean hands, only putting stuff down inside the lunchbox, which is clean -> finish, close lunchbox -> put on new gloves.
Which I'm all in favor of if it makes it easier for the authorities to spot the shit-heads still not following the rules, but I certainly didn't have "mandatory curfew, enforced by the actual goddamn army" on my 2020 bingo card.
I have my own tiny office, I'm the tech guy and a teacher, so I don't have lunch duty thankfully. I can easily stay away from people, in just wondering what to do with my mask while I eat. New mask after I eat? Gonna have to do laundry pretty often to wash em. Where do I put it? Just flat on a table?
I mean, chinstrapping or going fighter-pilot style* are kind of the two main methods I've seen
*
Wait you have open gyms and a military curfew?
How are they demonstrating that people are definitely transmitting this at a bunch of 9PM house parties and not the gym or cafe?
Curfew is pretty awful, and really fucks over people with no home to return to. I feel like at a minimum no indoor intense breathing spaces is a step before it.
Shamelessly stolen for Jon Oliver without credit given I see
For or from? The tweet's dated a few days after that episode of Last Week Tonight aired, at least.
edit: And clearly has the LWT editing/music on it
Once the second wave hits I suspect that its going to become mandatory to wear them outside your home, so I bought mine early to beat the rush.
I have been wearing a mask while training at the gym, but that was actually not for virus control issues. That difficulty to breath thing the anti-maskers talk about? Sounded like a great way to increase your cardio while lifting, so I figured I would give it a try. Uncomfortable, but it was great training for actually having to wear a mask day to day.
Nope. Still supposedly happening.
What a bunch of fucking goobers.
Yeah, that seems incredibly unlikely. I'd guess they're waiting until they are forced, by law, to cancel for contract reasons.
@SniperGuy Don't do the chinstrapping thing. It infects the inside of the mask with whatever is on your chin/neck. I'd probably to remove it, fold it in half so that the interior (the part facing your mouth is clamshelled inside), and place it inside its own container or bag. Ideally, of course, you'd get a new mask, but I think it's reasonable to just remove the mask during lunch if you have your own lunch space and put it back on afterwards.
A provincial mask order went into place on the weekend; we now need to wear masks while in stores.
I went to a Sobey's today, and to my surprise and delight 100% of the people there were masked.