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Saskatchewan

Sask. parents, teachers concerned after province's quiet change to school outbreak reporting

The Saskatchewan Teachers Federation and parents are calling on the province to provide more transparency in its reporting COVID-19 outbreaks in schools, after the province recently stopped listing all case numbers on its website.

Provinces website no longer lists exact case numbers for school outbreaks

The Saskatchewan Teachers Federation and parents are calling on the province to provide more transparency in the way its reporting COVID-19 outbreaks in schools, after it recently stopped listing all case numbers on its website. (AFP/Getty Images)

Like many other Saskatchewan parents throughout the pandemic, Rebecca Penner frequently found herself checking the province's COVID-19 school outbreak website. But that stopped late last month.

The Regina mother of two said it was around that time that she noticed the province had quit listing how manycases there were in schools where an outbreak was declared.

"There was no explanation as to why the way they reported on [outbreaks] changed," Penner said. "It gives me the impression that [the provincial government] is trying to hide something even if there's nothing to hide."

Since the changes to the website, Penner said both she and other families with school-agechildren are forced to dotheir own math when it comes to COVID-19 cases in schools. That means adding up the case notifications they receive through their school administration and by word of mouth.

"I've kind of given up looking at the government's website because the information's not transparent," she said.

According to the province, the change was made Nov. 29.

"Case counts will be updated until an outbreak has been declared," a Ministry of Health spokesperson said in an email to CBC News late Monday afternoon, quoting a line under its website's"COVID-19 Cases in Schools" heading.

"The website change does not change the approach to the outbreak response."

The province noted that school divisions are expected to work with their local medical health officers on how to deal with an outbreak, including on how to cut downtransmission.

It said it's up to schools toadvise their community of any outbreaks.

"Parents with questions about casenumbers in their child's specific school should contact the school," the Ministry of Health said.

'Contempt and a disregard for the public'

Andrew Deobald, a stay-at-home parent of three kids in Aberdeen, Sask., said it's concerning to see the province changing the way it's reporting on COVID-19 outbreaks in schools without clearly notifying residents.

"It lowers the level of trust I have in my government to keep myself and the public informed," he wrote in a series of online messages to CBC News.

"It shows contempt and a disregard for the public."

The top part of this image, a screenshot from October 2021, shows how the Saskatchewan government listed a case count in every school. The bottom part, taken in December 2021, shows how the province changed that column so that, in the case of an outbreak, it doesn't include exact numbers. (Government of Saskatchewan)

Deobald said the change in school outbreak reporting is contributing to his decision to keep homeschooling his two school-age children.

"Without that trust, I feel I have to keep my kids home until they are fully vaccinated," he said.

Education sectoralso kept out of the loop, STF says

Educators and school boards across the province were also not notified of the changes in how the government was reporting on outbreaks in schools, according to the Saskatchewan Teachers' Federation (STF).

"Information during a pandemic is critical for people to be able to make good choices," said STF president Patrick Maze. "If this change has been made without properly being rolled out and explained both on the website, but also to schools and the education sector then that's a concern."

Maze said specific case numbers are vital for parents to know and should be added back to the website.

"If it's only one or two isolated cases in a school, then maybe that would put them at ease but if it's 15 or 20 cases in a school, then that's obviously more cause for concern," he said.

Meanwhile, Maze said that teachers are also getting frustrated by the province's delays in posting about outbreaks on its website.

"It is a frustration to know that your school is in an outbreak and not to see it appear on the website for days," he said.

Maze said he understands that the health-care system has been strained due to the pandemic's fourth wave, but that it has also meantmany teachers have hadto do their own classroom contact tracing.

"It's not a teacher's responsibility to be making those types of calls," he said. "Adding one more thing to their plate is just unacceptable."

Corrections

  • On Monday afternoon, the province had told CBC News the changes to its school outbreak reporting started on Nov. 15. On Tuesday morning, the Ministry of Health issued a correction, saying the change happened on Nov. 29.
    Dec 14, 2021 10:01 AM CT