Coronavirus - how's everyone doing?
#121
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Some professions (doctors, nurses, ambos/paramedics, firies, police, armed forces) carry an ongoing expectation of being pressed into extraordinary service when the public faces extreme need. And where they are called upon to serve in that capacity, there are preset expectations involving hygiene protocols, personal protective equipment, and so forth, enabling them to take on those extraordinary roles as safely as possible.
"Teachers" are not on that list. In the present environment, many are being "pressed into service" in the old and involuntary sense of that phrase, without choice, without preparation, and without appropriate protection (PPE and other hygienic measures) being in place.
And that's just wrong, particularly for the older and more physically vulnerable among them.
In that context, it is no wonder that the teachers' unions are pushing back. That's *their* job.
Last edited by abner; Mar 25th 2020 at 8:18 am.

#122
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my missus has taken her long service leave from her preschool. Primarily to give her hours to other staff if they want to work, she's nice like that. Son has been laid off from Friday, daughter lucky enough to work from home, and me stuck in Newman but at least I'm earning.


#123
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The Courier-Mail reports that Brisbane State High School was vandalised overnight after an infected parent sent their Year 8 child to school.
The first test was a false negative and while awaiting the results of the second test, the parent sent the child to school.
Beoz - I think I mentioned almost this exact scenario earlier (quote below verbatim from my post):
plenty of parents are blowing off all the precautions and are being "covidiots." Those parents will get sick and send their kids to school anyways because (1) they are in denial if they or their child shows symptoms (2) their kid is a ratbag and they can't cope with having him/her at home - so what if the kid spreads virus, they need and want a break from their kid during the day.
The first test was a false negative and while awaiting the results of the second test, the parent sent the child to school.
Beoz - I think I mentioned almost this exact scenario earlier (quote below verbatim from my post):
plenty of parents are blowing off all the precautions and are being "covidiots." Those parents will get sick and send their kids to school anyways because (1) they are in denial if they or their child shows symptoms (2) their kid is a ratbag and they can't cope with having him/her at home - so what if the kid spreads virus, they need and want a break from their kid during the day.

#125
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Most of those are on the 'keyworker' list in the UK except hairdressers I think. Maybe there should be a move towards that and a lockdown?

#126
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There's some panic in the regions tonight. The WA Government isn't announcing where regional cases are occurring - ie, for the bus driver in Perth, they released the exact routes, days and times that he was driving, but for regional cases they are just saying "Kimberley" (which is almost half a million square kilometres) or "Great Southern" (almost 50,000 square kilometres). This is causing a guessing game and a bunch of "telephone" game style whispers as everyone tries to figure out the towns, and someone heard something from someone and so on, and then that is feeding back on itself.
But it's here, too late to close the barn gates, if there is something that Morrison and McGowan have taught me it is that they will always be three or four steps too late. The caravans from Perth area also starting to roll through the coastal regions to the north and south of Perth with Easter holiday-makers. No government decree to cancel holidays and non-essential travel is going to cancel their holiday, it doesn't apply to them and they deserve their break. Plenty of caravans rolling around with NSW and Vic number plates who ignored the border closure. The talked about regional lockdown won't happen until it is well too late.
There are no confirmed cases in my area of my region (and of course I heard that from someone who heard it from someone) but we can't be far behind.
Agree with Beoz to pop in prison those who are endangering others. Give them the Putin "deal you can't refuse" that's going around. 14 days in iso or 5 years in prison, your choice. We are on tight restrictions, home-work-supermarket-petrol station and that's it. Hope it is enough. No takeaways for us.
But it's here, too late to close the barn gates, if there is something that Morrison and McGowan have taught me it is that they will always be three or four steps too late. The caravans from Perth area also starting to roll through the coastal regions to the north and south of Perth with Easter holiday-makers. No government decree to cancel holidays and non-essential travel is going to cancel their holiday, it doesn't apply to them and they deserve their break. Plenty of caravans rolling around with NSW and Vic number plates who ignored the border closure. The talked about regional lockdown won't happen until it is well too late.
There are no confirmed cases in my area of my region (and of course I heard that from someone who heard it from someone) but we can't be far behind.
Agree with Beoz to pop in prison those who are endangering others. Give them the Putin "deal you can't refuse" that's going around. 14 days in iso or 5 years in prison, your choice. We are on tight restrictions, home-work-supermarket-petrol station and that's it. Hope it is enough. No takeaways for us.

#127
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Unless the curve start to bend over with the current persuasion tactics, which is unlikely, I don't think we have a choice other than total lockdown.

#128

If that's not correct, I apologise. I know a silver surfer who've gone off driving for the foreseeable future to avoid people, not the worst idea but they're a very sensible couple who won't take the piss when they come across people on their travels. I think they may be in a minority sadly. I'd kill my husband in those circumstances unless he got me first obviously.

#130
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And that is what teachers' union input has accomplished, in VIC and NSW particularly, over ScoMo's objections. Meanwhile, bus drivers, checkout attendants, delivery drivers, physiotherapists, and hairdressers remain (with restrictions) on the job, because they mostly deal with adults, who are capable of understanding and executing social distancing restrictions far better than children are.

#131
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According to this article they only closed the border yesterday and anyone coming in after just have to self isolate for 14 days so apart from them being idiots, it's not illegal. https://www.google.com/amp/amp.abc.n...ticle/12084628
If that's not correct, I apologise. I know a silver surfer who've gone off driving for the foreseeable future to avoid people, not the worst idea but they're a very sensible couple who won't take the piss when they come across people on their travels. I think they may be in a minority sadly. I'd kill my husband in those circumstances unless he got me first obviously.
If that's not correct, I apologise. I know a silver surfer who've gone off driving for the foreseeable future to avoid people, not the worst idea but they're a very sensible couple who won't take the piss when they come across people on their travels. I think they may be in a minority sadly. I'd kill my husband in those circumstances unless he got me first obviously.
I think it gets back to what has become one of the central themes of this crisis, already highlighted by disparate posters - government recommendations don't mean anything, to too many people, unless backed up with an enforcement mechanism.

#132
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From what we do know so far, infected children seem likely to be asymptomatic or mildly symptomatic of the disease itself, but that does not preclude them from being spreaders. Meanwhile, their comparative lack of symptoms make it less likely that they'll be systematically subject to testing and tracking, in those countries (i.e. most, at the current time) where testing remains rationed to patients showing more obvious signs of the infection.
Last edited by abner; Mar 25th 2020 at 10:11 am.

#133
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Why would you assume that?
From what we do know so far, infected children seem likely to be asymptomatic or mildly symptomatic of the disease itself, but that does not preclude them from being spreaders. Meanwhile, their comparative lack of symptoms make it less likely that they'll be systematically subject to testing and tracking, in those countries (i.e. most, at the current time) where testing remains rationed to patients showing more obvious signs of the infection.
From what we do know so far, infected children seem likely to be asymptomatic or mildly symptomatic of the disease itself, but that does not preclude them from being spreaders. Meanwhile, their comparative lack of symptoms make it less likely that they'll be systematically subject to testing and tracking, in those countries (i.e. most, at the current time) where testing remains rationed to patients showing more obvious signs of the infection.

#134
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And that is what teachers' union input has accomplished, in VIC and NSW particularly, over ScoMo's objections. Meanwhile, bus drivers, checkout attendants, delivery drivers, physiotherapists, and hairdressers remain (with restrictions) on the job, because they mostly deal with adults, who are capable of understanding and executing social distancing restrictions far better than children are.

#135
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For every cruise ship, there are several hundred classrooms. And it doesn't take more than a few minutes of observation to discern that younger children in particular are hopeless at social distancing, and hand-washing, and avoiding face-touching prior to hand-washing. Older ones "get it", but the discipline breaks down at the drop of a hat, let alone any more interesting distraction.
