You are reading

City to Require Weekly COVID Testing at Public Schools Beginning Next Week

Students head back to school in the Bronx ( Ed Reed/ Mayoral Photography Office)

Sept. 21, 2021 By Allie Griffin

The city will require weekly COVID-19 testing of students and staff at public schools beginning next week, Mayor Bill de Blasio announced Monday.

The Department of Education will increase testing from biweekly to weekly at all public schools beginning Sept. 27.

As such, 10 percent of unvaccinated students will be randomly tested each week at every school. Parents must give consent in order for their child to be tested.

De Blasio announced the testing increase a day after facing calls from the United Federation of Teachers to start testing each week.

“We will now go to weekly testing,” the mayor said during a morning press briefing. “We’ll be testing in elementary, middle, and high school, each school, every week.”

At the same time the weekly testing requirement goes into effect, less strict quarantine rules for unvaccinated students will become the new standard, de Blasio said.

Unvaccinated students will no longer have to quarantine when there is a positive COVID test in their classroom—as long as they have been following the mandatory mask-wearing guidelines and three-feet social distancing rules, beginning Sept. 27.

The change follows guidance from the CDC, and officials say it will prevent frequent interruptions to students’ learning. It “will allow more kids to safely remain in the classroom,” de Blasio said.

Queens public schools have a COVID-19 positivity rate of just .28 percent or 21 positive cases among nearly 7,400 tests of both students and staff, according to DOE data.

email the author: news@queenspost.com
No comments yet

Leave a Comment
Reply to this Comment

All comments are subject to moderation before being posted.

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Recent News

Red Storm stars reflect on historic season with fans dreaming of deep run during March Madness

In just his second year at the helm of the St. John’s Red Storm, basketball Hall of Famer Rick Pitino was named Big East Coach of the Year on Wednesday after leading his squad to its first outright regular season conference championship in 40 years and matched a program record 27 regular season victories. The Johnnies lost just four games all season by seven points combined. St. John’s also went an undefeated 18-0 at home for the first time since 1931-32. It earned them their highest national ranking (No. 6) since the 1990-91 season.

Pitino is the first St. John’s coach to be named the Big East’s Coach of the Year since Lou Carnesecca, who died on Saturday, Nov. 30, at age 99 and just five weeks shy of his 100th birthday.