High rates of absenteeism has GECDSB considering mask mandates
While masks are no longer required at many indoor settings some are taking matters into their hands, at least one local school board is considering bringing in its own mandate.
The Greater Essex County District School Board will discuss the possibility during its meeting on Tuesday.
“School boards should institute a masking policy. It is one measure. It is one component of trying to attenuate the increasing burden of disease,” Windsor-Essex acting medical officer of health Dr. Shanker Nesathurai said during an update last week.
A week ago, Ontario's chief medical officer highly recommended wearing a mask indoors but stopped short of a full mandate.
“If the medical officer of health thinks it's going to curb absenteeism then I think it's probably a good idea because since March Break we have just been getting slammed,” said Ontario Secondary School Teachers’ Federation (OSSTF) District 9 president Erin Roy.
Roy says in the last couple of weeks, absenteeism has been at an all-time pandemic high and that is causing stress on staff.
“X number of people away,” she said. “The people that are remaining have to pick up the extra slack and then they're getting exhausted.”
Roy says it's been a cyclical trend of staff coming and going.
“If it's going to help with the absenteeism then I think we have an obligation to try,” she said.
Metrics show the level of COVID in the region's waste water broke a record high late last week.
“Since the masking things have been lifted we can all say we've heard of more people getting sick. We all know somebody now that has had it,” said Cramdon’s restaurant owner Don MacPherson.
Businesses CTV News spoke with said they will follow public health guidance if masks are mandated once again.
“If it stops us from further restrictions or anything like that they would definitely conform for sure,” MacPherson said.
Some continue to recommend wearing masks and some customers continue to wear one.
“Because it's so transmissible that even if it's mild I don't wanna take a chance of getting long-COVID,” said resident Barb Kennedy. “That would be very bad.”
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
Trudeau's 2024: Did the PM become less popular this year?
Justin Trudeau’s numbers have been relatively steady this calendar year, but they've also been at their worst, according to tracking data from CTV News pollster Nik Nanos.
Manhunt underway after woman, 23, allegedly kidnapped, found alive in river
A woman in her 20s who was possibly abducted by her ex is in hospital after the car she was in plunged into the Richelieu River.
Death toll in attack on Christmas market in Germany rises to 5 and more than 200 injured
Germans on Saturday mourned both the victims and their shaken sense of security after a Saudi doctor intentionally drove into a Christmas market teeming with holiday shoppers, killing at least five people, including a small child, and wounding at least 200 others.
Overheated immigration system needed 'discipline' infusion: minister
An 'overheated' immigration system that admitted record numbers of newcomers to the country has harmed Canada's decades-old consensus on the benefits of immigration, Immigration Minister Marc Miller said, as he reflected on the changes in his department in a year-end interview.
Wild boar hybrid identified near Fort Macleod, Alta.
Acting on information, an investigation by the Municipal District of Willow Creek's Agricultural Services Board (ASB) found a small population of wild boar hybrids being farmed near Fort Macleod.
Summer McIntosh makes guest appearance in 'The Nutcracker'
Summer McIntosh made a splash during her guest appearance in The National Ballet of Canada’s production of 'The Nutcracker.'
The winter solstice is here, the Northern Hemisphere's darkest day
The winter solstice is Saturday, bringing the shortest day and longest night of the year to the Northern Hemisphere — ideal conditions for holiday lights and warm blankets.
22 people die in a crash between a passenger bus and a truck in Brazil
A crash between a passenger bus and a truck early Saturday killed 22 people on a highway in Minas Gerais, a state in southeastern Brazil, officials said.
Back on air: John Vennavally-Rao on reclaiming his career while living with cancer
'In February, there was a time when I thought my career as a TV reporter was over,' CTV News reporter and anchor John Vennavally-Rao writes.