01/18/2022 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 01/18/2022 07:43
Contacts:Ted Fisher, Agency of Education, [email protected]
Ben Truman, Department of Health, [email protected]
Montpelier, Vt. - The Agency of Education and the Department of Health announced new "Test at Home" guidance about testing and quarantine protocols at Vermont's K-12 schools. These changes, which go into effect as soon as schools have the tests necessary to implement them, are designed to allow students and staff to remain safely in the classroom as much as possible. This program replaces the in-school Test to Stay program for presumptive close contacts of positive COVID-19 cases with an "at-home" based rapid testing process.
State officials said the speed at which the Omicron variant spreads means that the current strategy -- which relies on contact tracing, in-school PCR surveillance testing, and in-school antigen testing -- is too slow and logistically burdensome to be workable for many schools. This new approach addresses the current state of the pandemic in Vermont by allowing schools to respond more quickly, and reducing the burden of contact tracing and testing on staff, which will help schools stay open and functioning as normal as possible.
Like Test to Stay, the Test at Home initiative makes use of rapid antigen tests to keep students and staff safe and in school. Test at Home moves the location of the testing to at-home, before school, giving families flexibility and reducing the logistical burden on schools, families and students. Schools still have access to in-school antigen tests, as well as PCR and other tests, to respond to students who become symptomatic at school, or who may have difficulty testing at home.
"These changes reflect the realities we now face with the Omicron variant of the COVID-19 virus. This approach reflects our recognition that while the new variant is highly transmissible, it also appears to cause less severe symptoms, particularly for those individuals who are vaccinated," said Health Commissioner Mark Levine, M.D. "Parents and caregivers recognize the stakes. As of now, 58 percent of school age Vermonters have received their initial vaccine doses, and we will continue working to get vaccination percentages up."
Under the new procedures, when an individual tests positive at a school, or a school is informed that a student or staff member is positive, the following steps should be taken:
Additionally, in the coming weeks, school nurses will be provided rapid PCR-like tests so that they can quickly test any symptomatic students or staff on-site.
"As Governor Scott said in his State of the State address last week, it is much better for students to be back in school," said Secretary of Education, Dan French. "The teachers, nurses and administrators of schools across the state have navigated complex, and by necessity, fast-changing procedures as the pandemic response has evolved, and they deserve our thanks," Secretary French said. "This new guidance will help keep our kids safe, healthy, and back in the classroom. But it is also designed to ease the burden on school staff, allowing them to spend more time doing what we all are in this for - giving our children quality education they deserve."
The Agency of Education will be providing more detailed guidance to supervisory unions in the coming days.
School testing guidance and information can be found on the Agency of Education website at education.vermont.gov/covid19/testing.