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Embed The school-age population accounts for a growing share of recent coronavirus cases across northern Michigan. Lisa Peacock, health officer for Otsego County, told NPR that without the school district s help it would be literally impossible to keep up with contact tracing. Getty Images
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The school-age population accounts for a growing share of recent coronavirus cases across northern Michigan. Lisa Peacock, health officer for Otsego County, told NPR that without the school district s help it would be literally impossible to keep up with contact tracing.
A Principal And His Tape Measure: Schools Are Helping Do COVID-19 Contact Tracing
Friday, May 14, 2021
Gaylord High School principal Chris Hodges measures the space between seats in a yearbook class. A student in the class tested positive for covid, and Hodges is working with the local health department to trace people who might have been exposed to her at school.
Brett Dahlberg/WCMU
Chris Hodges, the principal of Gaylord High School in Otsego County, Michigan, never thought he d be a contact tracer. I definitely thought, you know, Why why am I doing this? he says with a laugh. That s not what I went to school for.
Another pandemic ‘to do’ on the list for schools: Contact tracing
Chris Hodges, the principal of Gaylord High School in Otsego County, Michigan, never thought he d be a contact tracer. I definitely thought, you know, Why why am I doing this? he said with a laugh. That s not what I went to school for.
In what has become a regular part of his school day, Hodges fields reports on his charges such as hearing from the Health Department of Northwest Michigan that a student had tested positive for the novel coronavirus and was in school for three days when she might have been contagious.
The Department of Justice announced in the beginning of
December that it would stop all deportation proceedings against six men with
past connections to the IRA. The decision is the culmination of a three-year
legal battle that began when each man’s case was temporarily suspended in 1997.
Gabriel Megahey, Robert McErlean, Matthew Morrison, Brian
Pearson, Noel Gaynor and Gerald McDade will now be allowed to remain in the
U.S. without fear of being deported to Northern Ireland. In addition, they will
be able to work and travel freely throughout the United States provided they
are granted work authorization annually. They will also be allowed to travel