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Aiken County Public Schools' plan for maintaining health and safety during the COVID-19 pandemic, including mask usage, hand hygiene, cleaning protocols, contact tracing, and vaccinations. It also covers the district's approach to ensuring continuity of services, such as academic remediation, virtual instruction, counseling services, and meal provision.
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Aiken County Public Schools is requesting stakeholder and community input on its 2021-22 Safe Return to In-Person Instruction and Continuity of Services Plan as part of the school district’s fulfillment of requirements related to the American Rescue Plan (ARP) Act. On March 11, 2021, the American Rescue Plan (ARP) Act was signed into law. The U.S. Department of Education is providing an additional $121.9 billion for the Elementary and Secondary School Emergency Relief Fund (ESSER III Fund). This legislation is awarding grants to state educational agencies, including the S.C. Department of Education, to provide local educational agencies, including Aiken County Public Schools, with emergency relief funds to address the impact of COVID-19 on elementary and secondary schools across the nation.
OVERVIEW: A district’s plan must include how it will maintain the health and safety of students, educators, and other school and LEA staff, and the extent to which it has adopted policies or practices and a description of any such policies or practices, on each of the CDC's safety recommendations including: universal and correct wearing of masks; modifying facilities to allow for physical distancing (e.g., use of cohorts/podding); hand washing and respiratory etiquette; cleaning and maintaining healthy facilities, including improving ventilation; contact tracing in combination with isolation and quarantine, in collaboration with the state, local, territorial, or Tribal health departments; diagnostic and screening testing; efforts to provide vaccinations to educators, other staff, and students, if eligible; appropriate accommodations for children with disabilities with respect to health and safety policies or practices; and coordination with state and local health officials.
1. Description of Maintaining Health and Safety Keeping students and staff physically and emotionally safe is the number one priority of Aiken County Public Schools (ACPSD). The traditional 5-day, face-to-face schedule adheres to the current guidelines from CDC, DHEC, and SDE to the greatest extent possible. The current guidelines strongly recommend social distancing when possible, preventative health measures, and frequent cleaning of high touch surfaces (door handles, handrails, light switches, etc.).
Health & Safety Protocols for Staff
3. Modifying Facilities to Allow for Physical Distancing (e.g., use of cohort/podding) Social distancing protocols will be implemented to the extent possible. All classroom desks will face the same direction and will be spaced the maximum possible distance apart. Furniture and manipulatives that cannot be sanitized will be removed or secured from use. Students should be encouraged to avoid sharing their writing utensils, supplies, and tools. All classrooms will have hand sanitizer and Morning Mist disinfectant for staff to sanitize desks daily. Classroom doors will remain closed and locked during instructional periods. Teachers will be responsible for opening and closing doors when students enter or leave class. Restrooms will be monitored during class change to ensure established guidelines are being followed. To limit student travel, teachers should not use students to collect items from outside the classroom. Communal areas will be marked for social distancing. Student lockers will not be assigned or used. Water fountains will remain closed for use. Students will be encouraged to bring a water bottle to school; bottle fillers have been installed in each location. Schools will have protocols in place for students to refill water bottles and for students who do not bring bottles to have access to water. 4. Handwashing and Respiratory Etiquette It is recommended that children (and adults) wash their hands routinely and thoroughly throughout the day, particularly before eating, after using the restroom, and after hands are soiled or dirtied. There is no specific recommendation on the frequency or intervals of hand washing. Proper hand hygiene consists of washing hands thoroughly and often with soap and water for a minimum of 20 seconds. When hand washing is unavailable, students should use hand sanitizer containing at least 60% alcohol. Hand sanitizing stations will be available in classrooms and hallways. All persons are encouraged, regardless of presumed cause, to cover their nose and mouth when coughing or sneezing. Adults and students should also use tissues to contain respiratory secretions and dispose of these tissues in the nearest trash can after use. All persons should wash their hands immediately after contact with possible respiratory secretions and contaminated objects/materials. 5. Cleaning and Maintaining Healthy Facilities, Including Improving Ventilation Custodians will be required to disinfect high touch surfaces in schools throughout the day with the product HALT. These surfaces will include but not be limited to doorknobs, panic bars, counter tops, sink handles, and toilet and urinal handles. Student desks will be disinfected once per day by custodians with a clean cotton towel and HALT. Classrooms with tile floors must be swept and spot-mopped daily and completely mopped twice weekly. Classrooms with carpet
floors must be vacuumed and spot cleaned for spills daily. Teachers will also continue to be supplied with Morning Mist for daily disinfection of their workspaces. In schools that will continue to eat lunch in classrooms, custodians will assist with distributing rolling trash cans from the cafeteria throughout the school each day prior to lunch. Classroom trash cans must be emptied after lunch daily. Student desktops will be disinfected by custodians with HALT prior to the end of each day. If a building-level administrator is informed that a student or employee has contracted COVID- 19, the Maintenance Foreman for Custodial Services and Director of Maintenance and Operations will coordinate with the Administrator and Head Custodian to disinfect those parts of the school most affected by the student or employee. Custodians will utilize their issued personal protective equipment: facemask, gloves, and a face shield or safety glasses. The contaminated rooms will be treated with electrostatic sprayers loaded with BIO TAB 7. The room will be cleaned from back to front spraying all touchable surfaces. Computers and other electronic devices will not be sprayed directly. The custodian will spray the air over the device and allow the mist to settle. Aiken County Schools has an ongoing initiative to improve indoor air quality. Each classroom has been equipped with individual air purifiers equipped with HEPA and carbon filters. The school district has also contracted with an independent air quality specialist to survey all District HVAC systems to determine the feasibility of installing needlepoint bipolar ionization devices. Once the survey is completed, the devices will be installed to further improve indoor air quality. Aiken County Public Schools has incorporated the guidelines from the SC State Department of Transportation (SCDOT), CDC, and DHEC to ensure the health and safety of our students during bus transportation to and from school. Each bus will be cleaned and disinfected using approved disinfectant after completion of each route. Cleaning protocols require drivers to wipe down frequently touched surfaces with disinfectant, including those in the entrance touched by passengers, such as handrails and seat tops as well as those surfaces contacted by the driver (steering wheel, door opening device, etc.).
6. Contact Tracing in Combination with Isolation and Quarantine Aiken County Public Schools follows the recommendations of SC DHEC in accordance with the published Interim COVID-19 Guidance for Schools: Management of Known and Possible COVID- 19 Cases. School nurses are updated by the nursing supervisor when the guidance document changes. Isolation: School nurses and administrators exclude students and staff who test positive for COVID-19 or have COVID-19 excludable symptoms for which they do not get tested in accordance with the current isolation criteria.
Contact Tracing: Each school has an established contact tracing team which consists of a school administrator, school nurse, and others as designated by the location principal. Each member of the school team is required to complete the following course: https://www.coursera.org/learn/covid-19-contact-tracing. Additionally, Aiken County Public Schools has established a positive case procedure for the contact tracing teams to implement when a case is reported. First, information is collected using the ACPSD Positive Case Worksheet to determine the onset and whether the individual was present at school, school bus transportation, and/or school-related events during the infectious period. The completed ACPSD worksheet and DHEC 1129 are submitted to the nursing supervisor. Positive cases are verified by the school nurse or nursing supervisor by reviewing documentation of lab results. If no documentation is provided, the nursing supervisor consults with the DHEC Midlands Epidemiology team to confirm the case. All positive cases are reported to DHEC by the nursing supervisor through process established by the Midlands Epidemiology Team. After the case is confirmed, the school contact tracing team identifies students who may have been in close contact with the positive case during their infectious period, as defined by SC DHEC, utilizing bus and classroom seating charts and teacher/coach interviews. All identifying health information is held in strict confidence and shared only with those who need to know in order to thoroughly complete a contact tracing investigation. Quarantine: Students identified as close contacts to a positive case by the school contact tracing team are required to complete a 14-day quarantine from the date of last exposure based on the CDC guidance as of June 7, 2021. The names and dates are submitted to the nursing supervisor for district tracking purposes. All close contacts are notified by the school nurse or school administrator of the close contact and required quarantine by phone call and letter. For students who report close contact to a positive case outside of school, the school nurse will ascertain exposure dates from the parent and quarantine the student for 14 days following the last exposure. Student absences related to quarantine are shared with the principal, attendance office, and teacher so that absences are properly coded and instructional materials can be provided while the student is excluded. Staff members identified as close contacts (workplace and non-workplace) are required to report the exposure to the Human Resources COVID Team using an electronic link on the district website. The submitted information is reviewed and the team determines whether the exposed employee meets the criteria to be eligible to work as a critical infrastructure employee during quarantine. If they are eligible, they are required to monitor for symptoms daily and follow all mitigating safety procedures. If symptoms develop, they are immediately required to complete quarantine at home and recommended to be tested for COVID-19.
If a student or staff member develops symptoms while in quarantine or if there are repeated exposures, exclusion dates are re-evaluated and changed as appropriate. In accordance with DHEC guidelines, students and staff with a lab confirmed positive PCR or antigen test within the last 90 days or are fully vaccinated are not required to quarantine if they do not have symptoms. Documentation is required for either scenario to be exempt from quarantine. During a student’s period of isolation or quarantine, the student will be prohibited from any school-related function or extra-curricular activity.
7. Diagnostic and Screening Testing Aiken County Schools currently does not participate in diagnostic or screening testing. 8. Efforts to Provide Vaccinations to Educators, Other Staff, and Students, if Eligible: Aiken County Public Schools provided opportunities for school district staff in the following phases: Phase 1A: Employees eligible in Phase 1A were reported to Aiken Regional Medical Centers (ARMC) in January and provided an opportunity to be vaccinated if desired at an ARMC clinic. Phase 1B: Vaccine clinics for all school staff were held at six high schools during the months of March (dose 1) and April (dose 2) in partnership with Rural Health Services. Aiken County Public Schools will investigate the possibility of providing vaccination to eligible students and additional staff for the 2021-2022 school year in partnership with local health providers. 9. Appropriate Accommodations for Children with Disabilities with Respect to Health and Safety Policies and Practices Guidance and training will be ongoing as it relates to the continued provision of health and safety regarding accommodations for children with disabilities. Guidance will be issued, and training will be extended to relevant staff based on current CDC and DHEC guidance. The Department of Special Programs will assist school teams with understanding how to help prevent the transmission of COVID-19 within their classrooms and therapy areas while supporting students with disabilities. In addition, considerations to help special education teams plan for the continuity of teaching and learning services if there is a case of COVID- identified within their classroom or therapy area will be provided.
Each teacher, therapist, and staff member will be reminded regularly to adhere to the following health and safety protocols: · Wash hands often with soap and water. If soap and water are not readily available, use an alcohol-based hand sanitizer with at least 60% alcohol. · Remember to supervise students when they use hand sanitizer to prevent ingesting alcohol. · Clean and disinfect frequently touched surfaces. · Cover cough and sneezes with a tissue and dispose of tissue immediately and wash or sanitize hands. Support Hand Hygiene and Respiratory Etiquette with students by doing the following: · Teach and reinforce handwashing with soap and water for at least 20 seconds and increase monitoring to ensure adherence among students. o If soap and water are not readily available, hand sanitizer that contains at least 60% alcohol can be used (for staff and older children who can safely use hand sanitizer). · Encourage students to cover coughs and sneezes with a tissue. Used tissues should be thrown in the trash and hands washed immediately with soap and water for at least 20 seconds. o If soap and water are not readily available, hand sanitizer that contains at least 60% alcohol can be used (for staff and older children who can safely use hand sanitizer). The District and school teams strongly request that sick children and staff stay home through: · Communicating to parents the importance of keeping children home when they are sick. · Communicating to staff the importance of being vigilant for symptoms and staying in touch with school administration if or when they start to feel sick. · Adhering to established procedures within school facilities to ensure students and staff who come to school sick or become sick while at school are sent home as soon as possible. · Keeping sick students and staff separate from well students and staff until they can be sent home. · Having a plan if someone is or becomes sick. o Provide an isolated place for sick students (sick room). o Follow school district guidelines on how to disinfect classrooms and therapy areas. o Have readily available contact information in the event a student or staff member becomes sick or has COVID-19 symptoms or will need to be quarantined. Intensify cleaning and disinfection efforts:
· Develop a schedule for cleaning and disinfecting classrooms, restrooms/changing areas, equipment, supplies, etc. · Routinely clean, sanitize, and disinfect surfaces and objects that are frequently touched, especially toys and games. This may also include cleaning objects/surfaces not ordinarily cleaned daily such as doorknobs, light switches, classroom sink handles, countertops, desks, chairs, cubbies, and playground structures. Note: The most effective method for disinfecting is to lightly spray the surface and allow a minimum of 10 minutes for drying time. · Ensure cleaning materials are kept secure and out of reach of children. · Ensure there is adequate ventilation when using these products to prevent children from inhaling toxic fumes. Clean and Sanitize Assistive Technology Devices and Therapy Equipment · Items that cannot be cleaned and sanitized should not be used. · Items that children have placed in their mouths or that are otherwise contaminated by body secretions or excretions should be set aside until they are cleaned by hand by a person wearing gloves. · Provide individual/personal materials for frequently used items. · Instructional items that can be divided, counters, blocks, books, manipulatives, etc. Will be put in individual “work boxes” for students to reduce sharing/contact of toys and materials. Those materials can then be sanitized and rotated weekly if needed. · Workstations and centers will be sanitized as students rotate stations. · Establish a bin or container to separate all materials that have been in a student’s mouth, sneezed on, or otherwise contaminated until they can be sanitized appropriately. · Maintain individual seating. Label seats and table spaces so students will have their own chair. · Any schedules, teaching tools, token systems, picture exchange systems, circle or large group manipulatives, or other materials will be laminated for ease in disinfecting. · Items will not be shared as much as possible. Toileting When completing toileting needs for a student, staff and students will wash hands immediately following. Staff members will wear gloves when completing toileting tasks. Staff members will follow health and safety protocols as follows: · Preparing (includes putting on gloves) · Cleaning the student · Removing trash (soiled diaper and wipes) · Replacing undergarment · Washing student’s hands
· Cleaning up toileting station · Washing hands Feeding a Student It is important to continue addressing the feeding needs of our students while ensuring their safety and care. To the extent possible, when feeding students: · Staff will utilize gloves when feeding students. Hands will be washed prior to feeding students. · Staff will wash hands, neck, and anywhere touched by a student’s secretions. Vulnerable/High Risk Groups Based on currently available information, it appears older adults and people of any age who have serious underlying medical conditions might be at higher risk for severe illness from COVID-19. To protect those at higher risk, it is important that everyone practices healthy hygiene behaviors. · Staff who have students who have underlying health conditions should discuss care plans and specific ways to address health and safety needs of students.
10. Coordination with State and Local Health Officials The nursing supervisor serves as the liaison between Aiken County Public Schools and the DHEC Midlands Epidemiology team. In the absence of the nursing supervisor, a member of the Human Resources COVID team is designated to serve in this capacity. All positive cases are reported to DHEC via email to the Midlands Epidemiology team in accordance with the established process. DHEC also notifies Aiken County Public Schools if positive cases or close contacts requiring quarantine associated with the school district are identified during their case investigations. The information is sent via encrypted email to the nursing supervisor and disseminated to the appropriate schools/locations for implementation. If guidance is needed during a contact tracing investigation, the nursing supervisor consults with the Midlands Epidemiology team for recommendations via email and/or phone. OVERVIEW: A district’s plan must describe how it will ensure continuity of services, including but not limited to services to address students' academic needs and students' and staff social, emotional, mental health and other needs, which may include student health and food services. 11. District response on continuity of services:
Aiken County Public Schools plans to ensure continuity of quality academic instruction by providing the option of face-to-face instruction five days per week or full-time virtual instruction for grades 6-12 through AIKEN iNNOVATE, the District’s full-time virtual program, for the 2021-2022 school year. An intensive program targeting students who need academic remediation will be provided during summer 2021 to help close learning gaps due to the loss of instructional time due to the pandemic. Additionally, afterschool programs will be held at each school during the 2021-2022 school year to provide opportunities for remediation focused primarily on reading and math skill deficits. If students are absent due to quarantine or COVID-19 but can participate in instruction, remote assignments and instruction will be provided virtually and/or through hard copy assignments. If a school or schools must be temporarily closed due to illness or exposure, students will participate in virtual instruction through Schoology, the District’s learning management system, and Teams, the District’s virtual meeting tool. Students who are enrolled in VirtualSC courses will participate through Moodle. Students who participate in 4K Child Development classrooms or HeadStart or Early Head Start programs will receive instruction through hard copy packets and/or through a Teams virtual classroom. Social, emotional, and mental health services will be provided through universal supports in those areas through SEL-focused curriculum at each level. Counseling services will be available to students as well as staff through school-based counselors and an employee assistance program. The district will continue to provide targeted supports for students who have experienced trauma or who have significant needs through school counselors, special programs counselors, or mental health counselors. The District will ensure availability and accessibility of breakfast and lunch meals for any student wishing to receive on normal school days and during summer programming. Full-time virtual students will have the option of picking up “to go” style meals at school sites. When/if necessary, in-school dining arrangements will be modified to ensure social distancing. In the event of food service staffing shortages at a site(s) due to illness or other factors, food service employees may be shifted from other sites to adequately staff each location. The District is also working with a temporary staffing company to assist in meeting staffing needs. In extreme situations, other school or District staff could be mobilized to assist in non-food prep capacities. In the event of school or district closures, meals will be available to students on any scheduled, instructional day. Meals would not be provided on teacher workdays, weekends, or holidays. OVERVIEW: Districts are required to review and, as appropriate, revise their Safe Return to In- Person Instruction and Continuity of Services Plan at least every six months through September 30, 2023, including seeking public input and taking such input into account in determining whether to revise the plan and, if revisions are determined necessary, on the revisions it makes
to its plan. If a district developed a plan prior to enactment of the ARP Act that was made publicly available and was developed with public comment but does not address each of the required aspects of safety established in the ARP Act, the district must, as part of the required periodic review, revise its plan consistent with the ARP Act requirements no later than six months after it last reviewed its plan.
12. District Response on Ensuring Periodic Updates to its Plan According to the South Carolina State Department of Education, all school districts were provided with district-specific grant funding award information on May 24, 2021. A school district must have requested and received public input and have publicly posted its Return to In-Person Instruction and Continuity of Services Plan by no later than June 24, 2021, with scheduled, comprehensive reviews of its plan every six months. Aiken County Public Schools will solicit public input during a regularly-scheduled and/or special called board meeting and post plan revisions (if needed) by the following dates: November 24, 2021 May 24, 2022 November 24, 2022 May 24, 2023 OVERVIEW: The ARP Act requires that school districts make their Return to In-Person Instruction and Continuity of Services Plan available to the public online and that the plans be in an understandable and uniform format; to the extent practicable, are written in a language that parents can understand or, if not practicable, orally translated; and upon request by a parent who is an individual with a disability, provided in an alternative format accessible to that parent. Before making its plan publicly available, school districts must seek public comment on the plan and develop the plan after considering public comment. 13. District response on public input in development of its plan: Aiken County Public Schools will make a DRAFT copy of the school district’s Return to In-Person Instruction and Continuity of Services Plan available to all stakeholders and area media outlets on its website on Monday, June 7, 2021. District stakeholders will have the opportunity to provide feedback and input on the District’s plan. These avenues will include, but not be limited to, a public hearing during the Tuesday, June 8, 2021, regular meeting of the Aiken County Board of Education and plan input emailed directly to [email protected].
The school district’s Communications Department will gather public input and stakeholder feedback through Monday, June 14, 2021, at 10:00 a.m. Input and feedback will be used to make any necessary revisions/updates to the plan for its submission to the Aiken County Board of Education during a Special Called Meeting on Tuesday, June 15, 2021, beginning at 6:00 p.m. The school board will review the school district’s Return to In-Person Instruction and Continuity of Services Plan at that time with a recommendation by District administration for approval. Upon approval, the plan will be submitted to the S.C. Department of Education and posted to the ACPSD website by June 24, 2021, in accordance with State guidelines.