Mount Greylock Superintendent to Look at Data Before Lifting Mask Mandate

By Stephen DravisiBerkshires.com
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WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. – The Mount Greylock Regional School District will not be ending its face-covering requirement for staff and students until at least a couple of weeks after the commonwealth mandate ends on Feb. 28, Superintendent Jason McCandless announced on Thursday night.
 
McCandless told the School Committee at its February meeting that he wants to see at least a couple of weeks worth of data after students return from the February vacation before taking the step of relaxing face-covering rules in school buildings.
 
“At this point, we are not considering lifting the mask requirement until we have data stretching out at least, at a minimum, two or three weeks following a return from winter break,” McCandless said.
 
“I have to say as a school leader in the commonwealth, I was rather surprised [by Gov. Charlie Baker’s announcement this week]. … I was assuming that he would be maybe taking a page out of the New Jersey governor’s playbook and say, ‘We’re back from break on the 28th. We’re going to make the mask restrictions go away two weeks from that point so we could see what the aftermath of break looks like.’ I was a bit taken aback that that was not the case.”
 
To back up his point, McCandless showed the committee data indicating the preK-12 district hit its recent high point of cases, with 50 student cases and 12 adult cases, following the December break.
 
Since then, the district’s COVID-19 case count has declined, with 21 positive cases among students and three adult cases for the week ending Feb. 9.
 
McCandless did say that the district will be taking a number of steps to help return to a sense of normalcy starting Feb. 28, but removing face-coverings will have to wait a little bit longer.
 
He implied that lifting the mask requirement without knowing the case rate and other conditions could lead to a situation where students are masked, then unmasked and then masked again. He likened that to the uncertainty students and families experienced last year when they were unsure whether school would be in-person or remote.
 
“We are not lifting our mask requirements as of Monday, Feb. 28,” McCandless said. “It does not strike me as the right thing to do. We need time to work with local health officials. We want to hear from the families we serve, we want to hear from the staff we work with, we want to hear from our students who have thoughts on this.”
 
“We will not be looking at unmasking for at least two or three weeks, and, in honesty, I’m not sure that that is the absolute highest priority for a lessening of requirements that we have in the Mount Greylock Regional schools, but we do see other opportunities to open up a little further and return to some normalcy, even if we continue to keep masking.”
 
The good news for the district’s families is that, as of Feb. 28, a number of COVID-related restrictions will be lifted:
 
♦ Athletes will be allowed to compete unmasked; but will remain masked while on the bench.
 
♦ Musicians, actors and dancers will be allowed to perform unmasked.
 
♦  capacity limits will be removed for performances and games; though face-coverings will be required for audience members.
 
♦ Group project and work restrictions will be lifted at the district’s schools.
 
“We’re going back to letting kids do group and project group, we’re letting students sit in the ways that individual teachers choose to set up their classrooms and relaxing our distance requirements in classrooms,” McCandless said. “That doesn’t sound like a big deal, but I think for a lot of teachers and a lot of students, because of the way that they like to do their work best, it’s a pretty big deal.”
 
McCandless used the opportunity to renew his pleas to families to get their children vaccinated if they are eligible.
 
And, perhaps as importantly, families need to share their child’s vaccination status with the district.
 
McCandless noted that the district suspects some student vaccinations are not showing up in the Massachusetts Department of Public Health database because the students in question were vaccinated in nearby Vermont or New York.
 
One anomaly in the district’s data appeared to support that point. In Williamstown, the Mass DPH numbers indicate that more than 95 percent of Williamstown residents aged 12-15 are fully vaccinated (two doses of the COVID-19 vaccine) but just 47 percent of the town’s 15-19 population is fully vaccinated.
 
And the reporting to the district by families appears to lag even those DPH numbers.
 
At Williamstown Elementary School, for example, just 43 percent of the pupils have been reported and documented by families as being vaccinated. But the commonwealth’s numbers show that 77 percent of the population aged 5-11 is fully vaccinated.
 
“We can move to more and more of a normal school life for our kids and our employees,” McCandless said. “We can do this. Vaccinations and reporting to schools about vaccinations so we can have a good handle on the data we’re using to make these decisions is vital.”
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Williamstown Volunteer of the Year Speaks for the Voiceless

By Stephen DravisiBerkshires Staff

Andi Bryant was presented the annual Community Service Award. 
WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — Inclusion was a big topic at Thursday's annual town meeting — and not just because of arguments about the inclusivity of the Progress Pride flag.
 
The winner of this year's Scarborough-Salomon-Flynt Community Service Award had some thoughts about how exclusive the town has been and is.
 
"I want to talk about the financially downtrodden, the poor folk, the deprived, the indigent, the impoverished, the lower class," Andi Bryant said at the outset of the meeting. "I owe it to my mother to say something — a woman who taught me it was possible to make a meal out of almost nothing.
 
"I owe it to my dad to say something, a man who loved this town more than anyone I ever knew. A man who knew everyone, but almost no one knew what it was like for him. As he himself said, 'He didn't have a pot to piss in or a window to throw it out of.' "
 
Bryant was recognized by the Scarborough-Salomon-Flynt Committee as the organizer and manager of Remedy Hall, a new non-profit dedicated to providing daily necessities — everything from wheelchairs to plates to toothpaste — for those in need.
 
She started the non-profit in space at First Congregational Church where people can come and receive items, no questions asked, and learn about other services that are available in the community.
 
She told the town meeting members that people in difficult financial situations do, in fact, exist in Williamstown, despite the perceptions of many in and out of the town.
 
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