NL

Not all classrooms will have new ventilation systems when school starts, Osborne says

New ventilation systems are on the way for N.L. schools, but many of them won't be in place when K-12 classes resume next week.

Tender issued in mid-August stipulated that systems must be delivered within 2 weeks of purchase

An empty classroom in Wexford Collegiate Institute in Scarborough, Ont.
Tony Stack, CEO of the Newfoundland and Labrador English School District, recommends schools keep windows open as long as temperatures allow while the last of 4,000 ventilation systems are installed in K-12 schools in the province. (Evan Mitsui/CBC)

New ventilation systems are on the way for Newfoundland and Labrador schools but many of them won't be in place when K-12 classes resume next week, Education Minister Tom Osborne said Tuesday.

The provincial government issued a tender for 4,000 ventilation systems in mid-August with a stipulation that they be delivered within two weeks of purchase.

Osborne told CBC last month that he was "optimistic" the province could install most or all of the air filtration systems before the first day of class, but warned that supply chain volatility could delay the process.

This week, he said while many of the systems have been installed, some schools will have to wait a little longer.

"As we had indicated from the very start, certainly through the course of September, classrooms will be equipped with the air purification or filtration systems," Osborne said.

Tony Stack, director of education and CEO of the Newfoundland and Labrador English School District, said priority will go to schools that don't currently have an air ventilation system, as well as K-6 schools, whose students are not eligible for vaccination.

Education Minister Tom Osborne says the last of 4,000 ventilation systems on order will be installed in schools through September. (Henrike Wilhelm/CBC)

"These are very simple units to install: simply open the box and plug them in," Stack said. "There are filtration units in them and they will increase air quality."

In the meantime, Stark said, an open-window ventilation policy is recommended as long as the weather allows it, "which quite simply is opening the windows and encouraging all staff to it to adhere to that," he said. "And then as the fall and weather gets a little bit colder, it's just nice to have that device there to augment."

A breath of fresh air

The province's back-to-school plan, announced Aug. 12, signalled a return to mostly normal times; barring any high-risk scenarios, the plan contains no requirements for cohorts or physical distancing. It also marks an end to mask requirements, making N.L. the only province other than Saskatchewan to not require face coverings in schools or on buses.

Stack said Tuesday he's confident in the current approach.

"We're not out of the woods yet," he said. "However, we have trusted in the expert guidance of our chief medical officer and the entire team of public health. We work closely with them. I was discussing with an official just this morning about procedures. So we're in a good place."

Stack says he's confident in the province's back-to-school plan, which contains no requirements for cohorts, physical distancing or masks in schools. (Henrike Wilhelm/CBC)

Osborne said the back-to-school plan is supported by low COVID-19 numbers and high vaccination rates.

"We've done exceptionally well in this province when it comes to the COVID," Osborne said. "We've seen a couple of spikes, but we haven't seen the waves that other provinces or other jurisdictions globally have seen.

"We've done very well in terms of vaccines. We're in better shape this time this year than we were this time last year, because we've got 75 percent of the population fully vaccinated."

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