Coronavirus

How many COVID cases in Muscogee schools after mask policy changes? Compare districts

A teacher takes a student’s temperature before first period begins at Central High School on Tuesday, August 18, 2020 in Phenix City, Ala.
A teacher takes a student’s temperature before first period begins at Central High School on Tuesday, August 18, 2020 in Phenix City, Ala. mcook@ledger-enquirer.com

Some school districts in the Columbus area have been issuing weekly news releases announcing the number of reports they’ve received about students and employees testing positive for COVID-19 and those in quarantine. Others have been posting the data online or not at all.

Here’s the Ledger-Enquirer’s roundup of the information available to help understand how prevalent the coronavirus pandemic is in local schools for the 2021-2022 school year.

This dashboard is updated weekly as new data is made available.

Note: School districts don’t conduct COVID-19 testing, so the case numbers are based on reports given to them. This story was last updated March 8.

Muscogee County

GROUP

FEB. 21-25

FEB. 28-MARCH 4
New in-person student COVID-19 cases

2

2
In-person students in self-quarantine or isolation

2

2
New school-based employee COVID-19 cases

1

1
School-based employees in self-quarantine or isolation

1

1

After five straight weeks of declines, the Muscogee County School District’s number of reported coronavirus cases remained at its lowest level of the school year.

From Feb. 28-March 4, MCSD had three reported COVID cases (two students, one employee), compared to the same numbers from Feb. 21-25, according to the district’s news release.

MCSD announced Feb. 4 masks will be optional in district buildings, starting Feb. 14.

The district’s highest number of weekly reported cases this school year was 276 (206 students, 70 employees) from Jan. 18-21. The district was closed Jan. 17 for the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. Day.

The previous lowest level of reported COVID cases this school year in MCSD came Nov. 8-10, when nine cases (four students, five employees) were reported. Students were off one day that week for Veterans Day.

The weekly number of people in MCSD required to isolate or quarantine also remained the same.

From Feb. 28-March 4, MCSD had three people (two students, one employee) in isolation or quarantine, compared to the same numbers from Feb. 21-25,, according to the district’s data.

“Isolation” separates sick people with a contagious disease, and “quarantine” separates people who were exposed to a contagious disease, according to the CDC’s definitions.

The number of COVID-19 cases accounts for in-person students and school-based employees reported with active infections during the specified week. The number of quarantine and isolation cases for in-person students and school-based employees represents the total, considering quarantine periods of 14 days could overlap with reporting weeks.

MCSD has 30,822 students and 5,175 employees, including 3,605 based in a school.

Harris County

GROUP

FEB. 22-28

MARCH 1-7

Active COVID-19 student cases

1

1

Close contact student cases

2

2

Active COVID-19 employee cases

0

0
Close contact employee cases

0

0

The number of reported COVID cases in the Harris County School District remained the same.

That number was one (a student) from Feb. 22-28 and from March 1-7, according to the district’s news release.

HCSD implemented a mask-optional policy in all district buildings Feb. 8.

The district’s highest level of COVID this school year is 74 cases from Jan. 18-24. The district’s previous lowest level this school year was two cases from Nov. 16-19.

The number of people in the district who had close contact with an infected person remained two (both are students), according to the district’s data.

Following guidance from the CDC and the Georgia Department of Health, HCSD revised its COVID-19 protocol as it relates to close contacts as of Jan. 14.

Students in close contact with a COVID-19 positive case, regardless of vaccination status, may continue to attend school if they remain asymptomatic and have no fever without medication for 24 hours and if they wear a mask for 10 days from the time of exposure.

School system staff who have been identified as a close contact may continue to work if they have no symptoms.

“For COVID-19, per CDC guidelines, a close contact exposure is defined as any individual who was within 6 feet of an infected person for at least 15 minutes from two days (48 hours) before illness onset (or, for asymptomatic patients, two days prior to positive specimen collection) until the time the patient is isolated,” HCSD says in its news release.

HCSD has 5,545 students and 795 employees.

Chattahoochee County

GROUP

WEEK ENDING FEB. 25

WEEK ENDING MARCH 4

Current COVID-19 elementary school student cases

0

0

Elementary school students in quarantine

NA

NA

Current COVID-19 middle/high school student cases

0

1

Middle/high school students in quarantine

NA

NA
Current COVID-19 employee cases

0

0
Employees in quarantine

NA

NA

After three straight weeks of having zero reported COVID cases, the Chattahoochee County School District had one (a middle/high school student) the week ending March 4, according to the report on ChattCo’s website.

The district’s peak this school year was 39 COVID cases during the week ending Sept. 3.

Masks have been optional in district buildings since Jan 28.

ChattCo no longer releases the number of people in quarantine across the district for possible exposure to COVID-19.

In a Jan. 25 email to the Ledger-Enquirer, ChattCo superintendent Kristie Brooks said the decision to no longer report quarantine numbers is “based on the recent guidelines” from the Georgia Department of Public Health. The L-E has asked her to specify the change in the guidelines and will update this story when that answer is received.

“Much of this revision is due to the strong practices of our families as we are encouraging anyone to remain home if any symptoms of any illness are present,” she said. “Because of this and so many illnesses that occur in the winter months, we realize that numbers posted would not consistently provide accurate information.”

The change publicly was discussed at the January school board meeting and was announced via social media, Brooks said.

ChattCo has 929 students and 141 employees.

Phenix City

After the Phenix City Schools weekly coronavirus report showed four COVID cases were reported in the district during the week ending Feb. 18 — the fourth straight week of declining cases — superintendent Randy Wilkes announced in a Feb. 18 letter to parents posted on the PCS website, beginning Feb. 21, all district buildings will have a mask-optional policy. Face coverings will remain required on all buses, per federal mandate.

“This correspondence will be the last weekly report from this office unless matters necessitate its return,” Wilkes said in the letter. “Parents, please continue to report COVID-19 cases. In the future, schools will notify students and parents of protocol changes.”

Although PCS no longer posts its weekly COVID report on its website, some of its coronavirus data is available on the Alabama K-12 Schools COVID-19 Dashboard, which is updated each Thursday.

During the week of March 3, the number of coronavirus cases among students and employees in PCS was less than five, the same as the previous week, according to the state’s dashboard. The dashboard doesn’t break down that number for only students and only employees and doesn’t disclose the number of students and employees in quarantine. When the number of cases is less than five, the dashboard says, it doesn’t specify the exact number “to protect individual privacy.”

The highest level of cases in PCS this school year is 159 (129 students, 30 employees) during the week ending Jan. 21. The district’s lowest level this school year came the week ending Nov. 26, when PCS had one case.

PCS has approximately 7,340 students and 860 employees.

Russell County

The Russell County School District started posting its COVID-19 data for the 2021-22 school year Sept. 3 on its website. Instead of weekly numbers, RCSD reports cumulative data that isn’t broken down into students and employees.

As of March 4, RCSD had received reports of 432 positive coronavirus tests among students and faculty (11% of the school-based population), an increase of four from the report on Feb. 25, according to the district’s data. That marks RCSD’s first increase in weekly cases after four straight weeks of decline.

The district’s highest number of weekly cases this school year is 50 during the week ending Jan. 28 . RCSD’s lowest weekly increase is zero from Oct. 15-22 and Nov. 5-12.

An additional four RCSD students and faculty were in isolation or quarantine Feb. 25-March 4, pushing the cumulative total this school year to 1,726 (43%), according to the district’s data.

In a Feb. 25 news release, RCSD announced masks will become optional in district buildings, starting Feb. 28, but they will remain required on school buses to comply with the federal mandate.

“Although COVID-19 cases have drastically declined, the district will continue enhancing cleaning efforts and promoting social distancing,” the news release says.

RCSD has approximately 3,500 students and 525 employees.

Lee County

No data about the reported COVID-19 cases and quarantines is evident on the Lee County Schools website, and the superintendent didn’t reply to this week’s query from the L-E before publication.

The Alabama COVID-19 K-12 Schools Dashboard, which is updated Thursdays, shows the number of reported coronavirus cases among LCS students and employees was less than five during the week of March 3, compared to seven the previous week. That’s the district’s fifth straight week of decline in the weekly number of cases.

The highest level of cases for LCS this school year is 444 during the week of Jan. 27. The lowest level is zero during the week of Dec. 2.

The dashboard doesn’t report the number of students and employees in quarantine.

LCS has approximately 9,500 students. The number of employees wasn’t available.

This story was originally published February 1, 2022 at 3:49 PM.

Mark Rice
Columbus Ledger-Enquirer
Mark Rice is the Ledger-Enquirer’s editor. He has been covering Columbus and the Chattahoochee Valley for more than 30 years. He welcomes your local news tips, feature story ideas, investigation suggestions and compelling questions.
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