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COVID-19 cases starting to pile up again at Burnaby schools

But many of the dates are woefully out of date
Classroom with young children COVID
Young children wearing masks in classroom

Burnaby parents are once again being told about COVID-19 exposures in schools on the Fraser Health tracker site.

A month into the school year, we’re seeing more exposures in schools with multiple exposure dates.

In Burnaby, as of Saturday, Fraser Health listed the following Burnaby schools:

  • Burnaby South Secondary, Sept. 15-17 and 20.
  • Confederation Park Elementary, Sept. 22-24
  • Cariboo Hill Secondary, Sept. 20-21
  • Seaforth Elementary, Sept. 23-24
  • Stride Avenue school, Sept. 23
  • Taylor Park Elementary, Sept. 22

As parents have complained, these listings are woefully behind. Some suggest going to this Facebook page where parents are posting exposures as soon as they are informed.

Meanwhile, all students from kindergarten to Grade 12 are now required to wear masks, B.C.’s top doctor and the province’s education minister have announced Friday

Previously, masks were only required for students from grades 4 to 12.

Provincial health officer Dr. Bonnie Henry said the order will be in place for the remainder of the school term “as one additional layer to help reduce risk of transmission in classrooms, in schools.”

Henry and Education Minister Jennifer Whiteside have been under mounting pressure from parents and the B.C. Teachers’ Federation to do more in schools to reduce the possibility of transmission of COVID-19, and to report possible exposures.

With increasing cases of COVID in children age five through 11, for whom there is not yet an approved vaccine, the teachers’ union has been advocating for a mask mandate for children from kindergarten to Grade 3.

In the absence of a provincewide mask mandate for the younger grades, school districts in Vancouver, Surrey and Burnaby had instituted their own.

Eighteen Vancouver Island schools — including seven in Greater Victoria — are now on Island Health’s list of outbreaks or clusters of COVID-19 in schools, up from 10 on Monday.

  • With additional reporting by the Victoria Times-Colonist