With the risk of COVID-19, anxiety surrounds school reopening

COVID-19 case numbers went up by 101 at 1 p.m. Wednesday in Wyandotte County, according to the UG COVID-19 website. There were 4,223 cumulative cases at 1 p.m., and 93 cumulative deaths, one more death since Tuesday. The number of hospitalizations was 42. (From UG COVID-19 website)

As school districts here discuss options for returning to school after Labor Day, anxiety levels have started to go up among parents, teachers and students.

And rightly so, some would say, as COVID-19 case numbers have been rising in Wyandotte County, the Kansas City area, Kansas and the nation.

While the governor has tried to spare local communities the burden of making the school reopening date decision, other state-level boards have passed the buck down to the local school districts and local communities to carry the responsibility and make all the decisions. The reason given was that situations are different in different parts of the state, so local boards should decide.

In Wyandotte County, the Unified Government Health Department issued an order that schools cannot open before Labor Day, taking some of the burden of decision-making off the local school boards.

Some school boards still are deciding how they are going to reopen, whether with in-person classes or remotely. The Kansas City, Kansas, school board has decided to reopen remotely for the first nine weeks after school starts. In the Piper school district, the board decided to go with the administration’s plan to offer parents an option of whether to choose at-home or in-school hybrid learning for their children. They added five minutes to the end of each school day.

Board inundated by parent questions

The KCK school board has been inundated by parent and teacher questions about the details of the plan. The community wants to know what’s going on, one board member said.

“All of our board members have received several emails, calls and conversations around what’s happening with the fall school year,” said Randy Lopez, KCK school board president, at the Tuesday evening, July 28, special board meeting. Staff has been receiving calls as well, he said. The staff is currently working on options, he said.

“I just want to acknowledge the challenges, the uncertainty, the anxiety that our staff have, and are facing the questions that still remain,” Lopez said at the board meeting. “I promise you we are reading your emails.”

They welcome patrons’ ideas, he added. He said they are taking into consideration everyone’s ideas, and that the administration is doing everything they can to have the conversations that are necessary to provide solutions and answers.

“There’s still a lot for us to consider and talk about,” Lopez said. “We hear you, and we’re reading and seeing your messages, and we’re doing what’s necessary so we can continue to move our district forward in a positive manner and provide different options and solutions for all of our staff, students and families to keep us all safe, but continue to provide high-quality education.”

He asked residents to give them a little grace, and they hope to have more answers later as they move forward.

The reopening plan is still being worked out, according to Superintendent Charles Foust, who said at the meeting that they are trying to get a large ship to make a wide turn, and it’s not easy. Earlier in the meeting, board members said that the administrators have been working extra hours trying to come up with changes for the school year in a short time.

There are some challenges in working with the negotiated agreement and school calendar, according to Dr. Foust. When the 168 days are up, they will still have three weeks left of school technically, he said. They will have to figure out what that will look like, he said. They are trying to make sure the budget will work out.

Dr. Foust said at the board meeting the administration wants to present several options to the board. He said the district has to make sure everyone is safe, and it also has to make sure they are being fiscally responsible. Also, according to officials, the school calendar already has been negotiated, so some details may have to be renegotiated.

Nutrition and transportation budget streams are involved, and at-risk dollars will be at risk, according to the superintendent. They will only present what’s fiscally sound, as well as what’s safe, he added.

“The board has some tough decisions to make,” he said, “but it’s in everyone’s best interest.”

Board members asked for some additional information, and did not want all the information first presented to them on the day that they are supposed to vote on it. The board is talking about having a special meeting on Wednesday, Aug. 5, to discuss some of the details of the plan.

Doctors fielding a lot of questions about schools

Doctors at the University of Kansas Health System are fielding questions about school reopening almost every day during their 8 a.m. news conferences in Kansas City, Kansas, indicating a lot of concern among parents and teachers about school reopening.

People come up with questions about reopening school where the answer isn’t always easy. On Wednesday morning, the doctors were asked a question about what to do if parents test positive – should they send their kids to school or notify the school?

Dr. Dana Hawkinson, medical director of infection prevention and control at The University of Kansas Health System, responded that as they move further into the topic, they would have to see the infection dynamic when school starts, and they will have to decide how to navigate it. The same question could be asked about what to do when a child is sick in school. Would all the students around him have to be out for 14 days? Would the teacher be out for 14 days, he asked.

“I don’t know that we have the answers to those questions yet,” he said. The quarantine would be important, isolating a sick person in the home, and wearing masks in the household would be important, he said.

Continuing to have in-person classes if this continues would be unsustainable, he said, because so many people would be out for two, three and four weeks, and then there would be nobody in class. “I don’t know that we know the answers to those yet.”

Dr. Steve Stites, chief medical officer at KU Health System, said it was similar to questions about workplaces. The rules may be different for children under 10, who could be at less risk than older children. If they start chasing second- and third-degree exposures, they would never have anyone going anywhere, he said. They should take a hard look at isolating first-degree exposures, he said.

Dr. Hawkinson said they should do contact tracing, and parents should be told that there has been an exposure to their child, and those are the only details needed. Schools will develop their own protocols, he said, and notifications will probably be happening at schools.

Teacher concerned about students’ mental health

At Rep. Sharice Davids’ “Call with Your Congresswoman” program at 7 p.m. Wednesday, July 29, a teacher called in to ask several questions, including one about how staying at home is is adversely affecting the emotional health of adolescents.

Rep. Davids said that increasing case numbers are very concerning to everyone who is in a decision-making position. She added her office has been focusing on providing mental health and behavioral health assistance for people who may be experiencing uncertainty and anxiety. They are providing information about access to mental and behavioral health services on their webpage at https://davids.house.gov/coronavirus.

Dr. Amol V. Purandare of Children’s Mercy Hospital, a guest on the program, said children are missing out on traditional interaction, and school is one of the main places where children get social interaction, get a nutritious meal and make friends. If they are able to get kids back to school in a safe and effective manner, he said, they can continue the ability to interact.

In reopening, they need to make sure they limit some of the risks of COVID-19, he said. Wearing a mask and social distancing are important in reducing the risk of COVID-19, he said.

How to reduce children’s anxiety over COVID-19

At a 4 p.m. Kansas Department of Health and Environment news conference on Wednesday, July 29, Dr. Susan Voorhees, psychologist, discussed ways that parents can reduce children’s anxieties over COVID-19 and going back to school.

Kids already know that COVID-19 is out there, Dr. Voorhees said.

“The best thing is to talk to kids,” she said.

Anxiety is like a monster under the bed, it hides in the dark, in areas where people don’t want to talk about, she said. People worry about what will happen tomorrow, and what they heard on the news, and anxiety can grow and grow, she said.

“The best thing for kids is to talk to them about what’s going on, and give a name for what they’re feeling,” she said. Let them know it’s OK to be anxious, she said.

Parents can let kids know that they can concentrate on what they are worried about right now, as opposed to what they might be worried about in a week or two, she said. The process helps “kids get a little bit more of the sense that they are strong agents in their lives, and they aren’t just dependent on other people. Kids love that power.”

She said kids are always resilient when they have to do something difficult. With the virus, kids have come to their own level of understanding of the need for changes in their lives, she said. They may not like it, but they come to understand that things are different than they used to be, she added.

Kids who are doing the best are the ones who can have an active conversation about what is different this time. She encouraged parents to talk now about what will be different about school than it was before, and how they will deal with it as a family, Dr. Voorhees said.

The conversation can include discussions about hybrid learning, with people sitting farther away, shields at desks or teachers wearing a face mask, she said. Parents can start now, and show children what a 6-foot distance is.

If a student is staying home all day and using remote devices for Zoom-style instruction, it can be very tiring, according to Dr. Voorhees, and is a different emotional experience.

“Parents are going to be asked, as they have all spring, to be much more available to their kids, much more involved in their kids’ education, more aware of it,” Dr. Voorhees said.

But no one expects a parent to become a high school biology teacher, she added. There are resources available and parents need to learn to look for them and ask for them, she added.

There can be anxiety when parents and students think about going back to school with high case numbers and cautions about wearing a mask. Dr. Voorhees said kids are altruistic and if you tell them they wear a mask to protect their friends, they get that and want to help other people, she said. Kids will carry the message for you, she said.

Not being able to go back to school and build relationships with other children is a big concern and anxiety for children, Dr. Voorhees said. There is a lot that goes on with interaction of peers in preschool, and older children learn to work with the community , resolve differences and how to share, she said.

“One of the places that causes stress for people who are trying to make big decisions is we know this is having an impact on children’s development, and how do we keep them safe and help them thrive as well,” she said.

Her advice for adults trying to handle stress and anxiety is about the same, she said. First is to think what they are anxious about, is it something they have any control over or not, she said. Can they do something about it or not? Do they have to be anxious about it right now? They can’t do anything about what happens three weeks from now, but what can they do now, she asked. They can make sure they have enough masks, a plan for how to keep track of it, and talk to them about the plan for their school, she said.

“You break down the worry into little steps,” she said. Also, parents can plan a little quiet time for themselves into their day, she added.

Dr. Lee Norman, Kansas secretary of health, said this will be a good time for parents to model social distancing, mask wearing and hygiene.

Dr. Voorhees said kids can have the role in the family to make sure everyone leaving for school has a mask.

Dr. Norman said it’s important to have conversations with kids right now for emotional health.

Case numbers up in Kansas and locally

COVID-19 case numbers went up by 101 on Wednesday in Wyandotte County, according to the UG COVID-19 website. There were 4,223 cumulative cases at 1 p.m., and 93 cumulative deaths, one more death since Tuesday. The number of hospitalizations was 42.

Dr. Hawkinson said there were 34 COVID-19 patients on Wednesday morning at KU Health System, down from 35 on Tuesday. There were nine patients in the intensive care unit, an increase of one since Tuesday, and five patients on ventilators, an increase of one since Tuesday.

Kansas reported an increase of 698 cases from Monday to Wednesday, according to Dr. Norman, with a total of 26,870 cumulative positive cases. There were 14 more deaths since Monday, for a cumulative total of 349. Hospitalizations in the state went up by 56.

Nearby Johnson County saw an increase of 170 cases from Monday to Wednesday, according to KDHE statistics, for a cumulative total of 4,813.

Leavenworth County reported 1,406 cases, an increase of 14 since Monday, according to KDHE.

Sedgwick County, the Wichita area, had 3,951 cumulative cases, an increase of 135 since Monday.

Shawnee County, the Topeka area, had 1,374 cumulative cases, an increase of 50 since Monday.

Douglas County reported 632 cumulative cases and Riley County had 412 cases, according to KDHE.

Testing available

A free pop-up test for COVID-19 is available from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Thursday, July 30, at Quindaro Community Center, 2627 Brown Ave., Kansas City, Kansas.
The pop-up tests are through the Wyandotte County Health Equity Task Force.

Free testing is also being conducted from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. on weekdays at the Health Department, 6th and Ann, in the parking lot in Kansas City, Kansas, weather permitting. Testing ended early on Wednesday because of lightning.

Tests are for those who live and work in Wyandotte County, and who have symptoms or have been exposed to COVID-19 cases. For more information, call 311 or visit https://wyandotte-county-covid-19-hub-unifiedgov.hub.arcgis.com/pages/what-to-do-if-you-think-you-have-covid-19.

The KU doctors’ news conference is online at https://www.facebook.com/kuhospital/videos/578372059503046.

The Kansas Department of Health and Environment news conference is at https://www.facebook.com/KDHEnews/videos/744859036288249.

The Wyandotte County school start order is online at https://alpha.wycokck.org/Coronavirus-COVID-19-Information.


For information on the amended Wyandotte County mask order, visit https://www.wycokck.org/WycoKCK/media/Health-Department/Documents/Communicable%20Disease/COVID19/07142020MaskOrderAmendments.pdf and https://www.wycokck.org/WycoKCK/media/Health-Department/Documents/Communicable%20Disease/COVID19/07142020LocalHealthOfficerOrderMaskAmendments.pdf.


For information on how to make an easy no-sew mask, visit https://wyandotteonline.com/how-to-make-a-no-sew-cloth-mask/.


The state’s COVID-19 test page is at https://www.coronavirus.kdheks.gov/280/COVID-19-Testing.

Residents may visit the UG COVID-19 website at https://alpha.wycokck.org/Coronavirus-COVID-19-Information or call 311 for more information.

Wyandotte County is currently under Phase 3. See covid.ks.gov.


The state plan’s frequently asked questions page is at https://covid.ks.gov/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/Reopening-FAQ_5.19.2020_Final.pdf.


The CDC’s COVID-19 web page is at https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-nCoV/index.html.

Kansas could go backwards to Phase 2 of reopening plan, governor says

Kansas reported 26,172 COVID-19 cases on Monday morning, including 335 total cumulative deaths. There were 1,063 new cases and nine new deaths since Friday. (From Kansas Department of Health and Environment)
Wyandotte County reported 4,095 total cumulative COVID-19 cases on Monday, with 92 deaths. It was an increase of 30 cases since Sunday, according to the Unified Government COVID-19 webpage. There was one additional death since Sunday. (From UG COVID-19 webpage)

Kansas could go backwards to Phase 2 of reopening plan if the number of COVID-19 cases don’t start looking better, according to Gov. Laura Kelly.

In a news conference on Monday afternoon, Gov. Kelly said COVID-19 case numbers had risen in recent weeks, and she urged people to wear masks. She also said some counties now have reversed earlier votes against requiring masks.

“If we continue this trajectory, I will have no other choice but to recommend that we move back to Phase 2 of the Ad Astra plan to reopen Kansas by next week,” Gov. Kelly said.

Wyandotte County and the state currently are in Phase 3. The plan is mandatory in Wyandotte County but not in all other counties in the state.

In Phase 2, mass gatherings are limited to 15 people, and bars and nightclubs would need to close, Gov. Kelly said.

“I do not want to go backwards,” she said. “We can and we must do better.”

Kansas reported 26,172 COVID-19 cases on Monday morning, including 335 total cumulative deaths, she said. There were 1,063 new cases and nine new deaths since Friday, she added.

“Our numbers are at an all-time high,” Gov. Kelly said. Last week, the Kansas City metro area recorded more than 400 new COVID-19 cases each day, four days in a row, she said.

The average age of patients is decreasing in Wichita hospitals, Gov. Kelly said. The median age dropped from 64 in April to 52 currently in Wichita hospitals.

The average age of all COVID-19 patients in Kansas is now 37, according to KDHE statistics, she said. It’s getting younger all the time.

As of Monday, 103 of 105 counties had at least one positive case, she said. The number of cases is rising in the counties surrounding Wichita now, she added.

Gov. Kelly said elected leaders in Kansas cannot sit back and do nothing. It is not a partisan issue, she said.

Recently, in Ohio and Indiana, Republican governors decided to mandate masks statewide, because it works and minimizes transmission of the virus, she said.

Gov. Kelly said they would monitor the situation this week, and then make a decision on whether to move back to Phase 2 next week.

Wyandotte County reported 4,095 total cumulative COVID-19 cases on Monday, with 92 deaths. It was an increase of 30 cases since Sunday, according to the Unified Government COVID-19 webpage. There was one additional death since Sunday.

Johnson County reported 4,643 total cumulative cases on Monday morning, as compared to 4,381 cases on Friday morning, an increase of 262 cases, according to KDHE figures.

Leavenworth County had 1,392 cases Monday, according to KDHE figures, compared to 1,372 on Friday, an increase of 20 cases.

Miami County reported 108 cases on Monday, up from 96 on Friday, the KDHE stated.

Sedgwick County (Wichita area) had 3,816 cases on Monday, compared to 3,579 cases on Friday, an increase of 237.

Shawnee County (Topeka area) reported 1,324 cases on Monday, compared to 1,268 on Friday.

Douglas County (Lawrence area) is now at 616 cases, while Riley County (Manhattan area) is at 409 cases, according to the KDHE statistics.

On Friday afternoon, the Kansas Department of Corrections announced that one resident at the Hutchinson Correctional Facility and five residents at the El Dorado Correctional Facility have tested positive for COVID-19. Six men were moved to Lansing Correctional Facility, to a newer facility equipped to control COVID-19, according to a spokesman. Four additional men in El Dorado facility, who were roommates of those who tested positive, also were moved to Lansing Correctional Facility, according to a news release.

The governor’s news conference is at https://www.facebook.com/GovLauraKelly/videos/1631147850397113.

Residents may visit the UG COVID-19 website at https://alpha.wycokck.org/Coronavirus-COVID-19-Information or call 311 for more information.

COVID-19 data for the metro area is on the KC Region COVID-19 Resource Hub at http://marc-gis.maps.arcgis.com/apps/opsdashboard/index.html#/1c93961075454558b3bf0dfad014feae

For information on the amended Wyandotte County mask order, visit https://www.wycokck.org/WycoKCK/media/Health-Department/Documents/Communicable%20Disease/COVID19/07142020MaskOrderAmendments.pdf and https://www.wycokck.org/WycoKCK/media/Health-Department/Documents/Communicable%20Disease/COVID19/07142020LocalHealthOfficerOrderMaskAmendments.pdf.


The value of social distancing and wearing a mask was demonstrated by the KU doctors, who went into a walk-in freezer to show how far the virus and breath can spread. Masks stopped the breath and particles from spreading. To see the video, visit https://www.facebook.com/kuhospital/videos/2378490412455079.


For information on how to make an easy no-sew mask, visit https://wyandotteonline.com/how-to-make-a-no-sew-cloth-mask/.

The state’s COVID-19 test page is at https://www.coronavirus.kdheks.gov/280/COVID-19-Testing.


Wyandotte County is currently under Phase 3. See covid.ks.gov.


The state plan’s frequently asked questions page is at https://covid.ks.gov/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/Reopening-FAQ_5.19.2020_Final.pdf.

The CDC’s COVID-19 web page is at https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-nCoV/index.html.

Health Department issues order prohibiting public school buildings from opening before Labor Day

Hours before the Piper school board is to consider what date to reopen schools, the Wyandotte County Health Department has issued a new order prohibiting public school buildings from opening to in-person classes before Labor Day.

The Piper superintendent is scheduled to present a proposal to the school board tonight to open after Labor Day, with a hybrid and a remote learning model, according to the school district’s social media page.

The Kansas City, Kansas, Public Schools already have announced they won’t open until after Labor Day, and they will have nine weeks of remote learning when they open. The KCK school board voted on it last week.

According to a Unified Government Health Department news release, Dr. Allen Greiner, Wyandotte County chief medical officer, issued the new order to ensure educators have sufficient time to prepare for school reopening.

The new order stated that school buildings would not open until after Labor Day, Sept. 7, in Wyandotte County. The order will go into effect at 12:01 a.m. July 28 and remain in effect until COVID-19 pandemic conditions warrant a change in Wyandotte County.

Under the health order, school districts will be required to submit their plans for reopening to the Health Department for approval.

According to the news release, today’s move comes in response to growing concerns about the health and safety of school-aged children, young adults, and their teachers. It is also in response to the dramatic increase in the number of new COVID-19 cases seen throughout the Greater Kansas City metropolitan area and safety concerns voiced by local leaders and parents, according to the spokesman.

“Last month, we worked closely with our local schools to start planning for the 2020-2021 school year,” said Dr. Erin Corriveau, deputy medical officer with the Unified Government’s Public Health Department. “A committee of educators from schools across our county have collaborated with public health experts to develop standards for each re-opening phase of our schools, as part of the ReStart WyCo Plan. We are still fighting to curb the spread of COVID-19 in our community, and we could find ourselves at different re-opening phases over the course of the school year. This additional guidance will help our schools keep their students, faculty, and staff as safe as possible, no matter what reopening phase we are in.”

The new health order is an extension of previous guidance, and it applies to public schools within Wyandotte County’s jurisdiction. This includes:
• Bonner Springs-Edwardsville Unified School District (USD 204)
• Kansas City, Kansas, Public Schools (USD 500)
• Piper School District (USD 203)
• Turner Unified School District (USD 202)

“The decision to prohibit schools from opening to in-person classes until after September 7 was not made lightly, as we know that in-person socialization plays an important role in the longer-term positive health impacts on individuals and our community as a whole,” Dr. Greiner said. “This order was issued to protect our children, young adults, teachers, and those populations most vulnerable to COVID-19 in Wyandotte County. This order does not prohibit distance learning, so all schools may resume virtual classes as soon as they would like.”

While subject to amendment if future medical data requires enhanced measures, this order mandates the following:

• All schoolchildren and educators must wear masks while inside and in outdoor groups at all times. Masks must be worn outdoors when 6 feet distance cannot be maintained, otherwise, masks wearing may be temporarily relaxed.

• Hand sanitizer should be used by students and teachers several times daily

• Social distancing of at least 6 feet between children and educators should be maintained.

• Cohorting should be ensured at every grade level, such that grades will be siloed with one or a small number of educator/supervisor during class sessions.

• The use of outdoor space as much as possible for coursework learning, physical education, music and singing is encouraged. Social distance of 6 feet or more must be maintained when outdoors. Masks must be worn outdoors when 6ft social distance cannot be maintained.

• Children should be cohorted, but they also must be physically spaced out throughout entire buildings/facilities/campuses so that schools achieve 50% less density of students in available spaces. Schools may use multiple methods to achieve 50% less density of students in the physical spaces they have available to them – This does not necessarily mean that there are half as many kids in attendance, rather it can be the same number of kids but spaced out into twice the total amount of space that would typically be utilized.

This may be achieved creatively such as examples below, or other suggestions will be accepted as well:


– 1st – 7th graders back to school full-time, 8th – 12th grade distance learning full-time;

– Children spaced within the school such that non-traditional spaces may be used as educational space such as gymnasiums, group rooms, band/singing rooms, etc.; or
– cohort A and B rotate days physically present at the school – i.e. every other day schooling.

School districts in Wyandotte County will be required to submit their plan to comply with the health department for approval before implementation in the schools.

Additional data and resources on COVID-19 in Wyandotte County is at wycokck.org/COVID-19 or call 3-1-1.

The new health order is online at file:///C:/Users/mer-pro/Downloads/07272020_LocalHealthOrderRegardingPublicSchoolsOpening%20(1).pdf.