Coronavirus forces changes to Winnipeg student trips - Action News
Home WebMail Monday, November 11, 2024, 01:34 AM | Calgary | -0.5°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Manitoba

Coronavirus forces changes to Winnipeg student trips

Some Winnipeg students will get different passport stamps than originally expected after coronavirus fears forced their spring-break travel itineraries to be changed.

Winnipeg School Division implementing lowest level of its pandemic plan

Student groups from four Winnipeg School Division high schools are set for international trips starting later this month. None have been cancelled, but the itineraries for two of the trips have been changed after the coronavirus outbreak. (motive56/Shutterstock)

Some Winnipeg students will get different passport stamps than originally expected after coronavirus fears forced their spring-break travel itineraries to be changed.

A group of Kelvin High School students was planning to go to China but travel advisories for that country mean they'regoing to seewestern Europe instead, said Winnipeg School Division spokespersonRadean Carter.

The other affected trip involved a group from Grant Park High School.Their European excursion originally included stops inItaly, but coronavirus cases have spiked in the northern part of that country and forced some places there to implement lockdowns.

The Grant Park students haveadjusted their plans to avoid Italy, Carter said.

As of now, no trips have been outright cancelled they've just been tweaked, she said.

Two other schools in the division Churchill and Daniel McIntyre have international trips planned for later this month.No changes have been announced to those trips yet.

The Daniel Mac students are headed to the western Europe, while the Churchill group is going to eastern Europe.

The Churchill trip had also included a day at the Louvrein Paris, although the world'slargest art museum has been shuttered due to theCOVID-19outbreak.

The coronavirus that causes the COVID-19 disease was first detected in China and has now been detected in 60 locations internationally. (NIAID-RML/The Associated Press)

"We've still got a few weeks until spring break comes. If these advisories expand then that might affect travel more," said Carter.

"But at this point the advisory from the Canadian government is really only China and some small parts of Europe."

In all, the trips involvefewer than 100 students, Carter said.

The division has not been inundated by calls from concerned parents because the trips are not school-planned ones, she added.

They are set up by teachers and parents through private companies, such as Explorica Canada, whichhelpco-ordinate the itineraries, so all parents of students registered for a trip have other contacts through that arrangement.

Interview requests sent byCBCNews to Exploricahave not been returned.

Carter said the school division also has somecurriculum-based educational trips happening throughout the remainder of the school year, but none of those have been affected becausenone areoverseas.

Focus on hygiene, awareness

Although Manitoba is still considered to be at low risk for the virus, the school division has a pandemic plan in place.

"We're ready if things start to get worse," Carter said. "But at this point it's very much about containing the virus and preventing the spread of the virus."

The lowest level of the plan, which was created in response to the SARS outbreak in 2002 and 2003, has been implemented but that simply means encouraginggood handwashingpractices and reminding people to sneeze or coughinto their elbows.

"We also have a custodial crew doing extra cleaning of doorknobs and light switches and common surfaces.So those are added to their regular cleaning," Carter said.

It's also about being more aware of routine situations where germ transfer is heightened, she said.

"One of the funny things is how much open candy there might be around how often you dip your hand into that bowl of jellybeans or or mintsthat's there."

"If we're reallygoing to be careful, we have to think about those things in advance."

CBC has contacted every Winnipeg school division, as well as a number of the private schools, all of which saidno trips have been cancelled.

Thestandard response has been that the well-being of students is a top priority and they areclosely monitoring the evolving situation worldwide.

They all say theywilltake their direction from thegovernment of Canada and the Public Health Agency of Canada, as well as the companies organizing thetrips.

"Manitobans can rely on the fact that their government and public health will keep them in the know," provincial Health MinisterCameron Friesensaid on Tuesday.