Hamilton school outbreak declared 1 day before students return to class - Action News
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Hamilton

Hamilton school outbreak declared 1 day before students return to class

Hamilton's first school outbreak has been declared one day before the school year starts.

2 staff members atSt. James the Apostle Catholic Elementary School tested positive

A row of desks in a class.
An outbreak has been declared at a local school one day before classes resume for the year. (Bobby Hristova/CBC)

Hamilton's first outbreak for the 2021-2022 school yearhas been declared one day before the year formally starts for students.

Two staff members atSt. James the Apostle Catholic Elementary School tested positive for the virus according to the city's public health dashboard.

Hamilton's Catholic school board wrote in a statementonline that the twoemployeeswere last in school on Sept. 2 and the cases are linked. A workplaceoutbreak may be declaredwhentwo or more confirmed cases are connected and "it is likely that the infection was spread in the workplace," according to the city.

The board said both staff members won't return to the site until public health clears them.

"The identity of the individuals will not be released out of privacy considerations,"reads the school message from principalElena Minicucci.

"Students and staff should attend school, unless they have been directed otherwise by [public health], and to screen daily for COVID-19 symptoms on the provincial COVID-19 school screening website."

Staff in the Catholic and public school boards must report their vaccination status and, if unvaccinated, do regular testing and receive training.

Public health will do'everything' to avoid move toremote learning

The city's medical officer of health, Dr. Elizabeth Richardson, said school outbreaks are inevitablebecause school cases reflect what is happening in the broadercommunity.

"That said, we are doing everything we can with the schoolboards, taking the lead in keeping our kids in schools rather than come out of the school setting," she said in a media briefing on Tuesday afternoon.

"You've heard from [Ontario's]chief medical officer of health, Kieran Moore, that he doesn't see a situation in which we're actually going to have to close down schools in terms of a full schoolboard-wide closure."

She said while some classes may be dismissed or there could be a short school-wide closure depending on the circumstances, Richardson said public health will do "everything that we can" to ensure a board-widemove to remote learning doesn't happen again like last year.

Hamilton's Catholic school board has a total of five active cases, including the outbreak.

One St. Gabriel Catholic Elementary School staff member tested positive and was last in the building on Sept. 2, but the Catholic board says no students were affected.

OneSt. Thomas More Catholic Secondary School student who was in the schooltested positive for the viruson Sept. 1, as did aBishop Tonnos Catholic Secondary School student, who was also on site, on Aug. 31.

The public school board had a Sherwood Secondary School staff member and aLake Avenue Elementary School staff membertest positive for COVID-19 according to separateonline posts on Sept. 4 but no students or staff were listed as close contacts for either case.