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School custodians strive to keep COVID out. But here's what they do when there's an outbreak

School custodians usually deal with dirty halls, clogged toilets and gum under desks. This year, there's an added challenge — keeping COVID-19 at bay.

'We often are the bottom people on the rung of the hierarchy,' says custodian

Since the pandemic started, custodian Jess Grove's job has become much more demanding, with more surfaces to clean more times a day to try and keep the virus from spreading. She's feeling nervous. 'I'm being exposed to possibly hundreds, if not thousands of students.' (Submitted by Jess Grove)

Jess Grove used to dread cleaning gum plunked under desks and glitter gone awry from class crafts.

"It was very simple, mindless things," she said. "Now I just wish those were my worst problems."

Custodians like Grove are now tasked with keeping COVID-19 from spreading in Ontario schools — and being first responders if the virus gets in. The job has become much more demanding, with more surfaces to clean more times a day to try and keep the virus out.

She is a floater with York Catholic District School Board, travelling school to school to keep them as clean as possible.

"We are the defence, right?" she said. "Where people are fleeing and leaving ... we are the ones that go in and attack."

The focus is touch points: light switches, classroom chairs, hand railings, door handles, water fountains, those little knobs on bathroom stalls.

Custodians have had to start cleaning surfaces they wouldn't really think about before, like chairs and door frames, which Grove has started cleaning 'religiously.' (Submitted by Jess Grove)

"Who would have ever thought to wash off a pencil sharpener?" said Tammy Graham, a custodian with Lakehead District School Board in Thunder Bay.

"You think about everything that people touch and the things that you should be cleaning. You're like, 'OK, 100 kids probably touched this thing today.'"

The pandemic has helped Graham realize just how important her job will be during this unpredictable school year.

"We often are the bottom people on the rung of the hierarchy and we don't get thought of a lot," she said. "During these times, people really need to know how important our roles are."

'You worry every day'

Cases of COVID-19 have already popped up at 35 schools around Ontario. Schools and public health units assess the situation and decide whether to close a class or the entire school, depending on who was exposed.

As that's being sorted out, school custodians are busy deep cleaning, outfitted in PPE and equipped with some new sanitation tools to make the school as safe as possible, like a special machine that sprays disinfectant.

So far, school cases have been clustered around the Greater Toronto Area, southern and eastern Ontario, but it still makes Graham nervous.

"You worry every day that the virus is coming into the building before you even start," she said.

The province has allocated $79 million to hire up to 1,300 extra custodians and buy more cleaning supplies. Graham doesn't think that's enough though, as some custodians still have to move between schools.

With the return of students, Tammy Graham's social bubble has burst. She's being exposed to hundreds of students daily. (Submitted by Tammy Graham)

It's a model that has caused issues in other jobs, like long-term care home employees who initially moved between facilities, unknowingly spreading the virus.

The province banned that practice in long-term care homes in April, but school boards are allowing it for custodians this fall, though trying to limit it if they can.

'We can only do so much'

The custodian staffing crunch ranges between school boards. Mike Galipeau cleans Superior Heights Collegiate in Sault Ste. Marie, Ont., where he also serves as president of his local union chapter.

He has extra staff and feels well prepared to tackle the year ahead.

"It's a lot of extra work with the extra enhanced cleaning that we're doing every day but we're coping with it," he said. "We've gotten everything we need to feel safe."

To prep for the school year, Grove got rid of many fabrics from classrooms where COVID could live, like puppets, carpets, curtains and mats. (Ivanoh Demers/Radio-Canada)

Grove worries but feels like her school board is doing the best they can with the resources they have and wouldn't put her in danger.

She knows she can only control so much and takes what she can control seriously. For example, she's got a bin at her back door where she drops her work clothes when she gets home before hopping into the shower.

She hopes others are taking precautions too, like keeping kids home from school if they are showing symptoms.

"We are doing the best we can but we can only do so much," she said. "I'm scared. But I'm ready to fight."

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Haydn Watters is a roving reporter for Here and Now, CBC Toronto's afternoon radio show. He has worked for the CBC in Halifax, Yellowknife, Ottawa, Hamilton and Toronto, with stints at the politics bureau and entertainment unit. He ran an experimental one-person pop-up bureau for the CBC in Barrie, Ont. You can get in touch at haydn.watters@cbc.ca.