No school for Manitoba K-12 students for 3 weeks starting March 23 - Action News
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Manitoba

No school for Manitoba K-12 students for 3 weeks starting March 23

The province is closing schools a week early for spring break and keeping them closed for an extra week to get ahead of COVID-19, Education Minister Kelvin Goertzen says.

Teachers, staff still asked to come to work to prepare lessons, maintain schools

Schools in Manitoba will close a week early for spring break and stay closed until after Easter, the provincial government says. (Warren Kay/CBC)

Schoolwillbe out for Manitoba students for an extra two weeks this spring, in whatEducation Minister Kelvin Goertzensays is a proactive response against the spread of the novel coronavirus.

"We need to stay ahead of the virus, instead of running behind it," Goertzen said at aFriday afternoon news conference.

The province said classes will be cancelled for one week before spring break and one week after, leaving students out from March 23 until April 13.

The province identified its first cases of COVID-19, the illness caused by the coronavirus, earlier this week.

"We believe that our schools are safe," Goertzen said. "However, the experience in other provinces andother parts of the world tells us that proactive measures lessen the impact of the spread of COVID-19 and lessens the negative impact on individuals."

The government is providingnotice a week earlyso parents can make child-care arrangements and the education system can prepare.

WATCH | Education minister on why it's important to suspend classes:

Province cancels classes starting March 23

4 years ago
Duration 0:53
Education Minister Kelvin Goertzen says Manitoba needs to get ahead of the COVID-19 virus.

Teachers are being asked to continue to work for the weeks on either side of spring break where possible,to prepare lessons for students to completeat home, Goertzensaid. Other school staff are asked to use those two weeks to prepare schools for the return of students, which could include cleaning and maintenance.

Officials are looking at contingency plans that may compress lessons that students will miss during the closure, the education ministersaid.

"We hope that Manitobans understand and appreciate that thisstep is being taken with the communityinterest in mind, and that it will lessen the impact of the virus on all community members," he said.

There's no decision on whether the closure will extend beyondthree weeks, but the province will update the public before April 13, Premier Brian Pallister said.

Daycares staying open for now

The province's order will not affect child-care centres at this point.

"We have numerous issues in front of us and that is one of them," Pallister said,"especially in light of the greater need that will occur as a consequence of school closures."

The class cancellations were recommended by Dr. Brent Roussin, the province's chiefhealth officer, who said earlier on Friday that it may be counterproductive to close schools, since it meanskids may gather in large groups on their own.

Roussin said he changed his mind Friday after further consultation andstudyingother jurisdictions.

Education Minister Kelvin Goertzen speaks at Friday's media conference announcing the closure of schools in the province. (Jeff Stapleton/CBC)

"Getting out ahead of it is going to be a good step to reduce the impact here," he said.

Many education leaders supported themove, while acknowledging the challenges ahead.

"I think itdemonstratedsignificant leadership to try and get out ahead of thispandemic," said Chris Broughton, chair of the Winnipeg School Division.

Manitoba Teachers' Society president James Bedford said the province is calming the anxietyof some teachers.

"To be honest with you, I'm a bit relieved the province is taking a lead on this," Bedford said.

"Our members are very concerned about the health and the well-being of the students in their classrooms, but also our members have families of their own, and they're definitely concerned about their own health and the health of their families."

Liz Harvey, a parent of two children at Grosvenor School, says the closure will be tough on families with two working parents.

"When people have to take sick time ortake unpaid leave,that's going to be an enormous financial impact to them as well," she said.

In-person classes suspended at U of M and U of W

Also on Friday, the University of Manitoba and University of Winnipeg both announced they havesuspended all in-person classes and labs for the rest of the winter term.

"All in-person undergraduate and research-stream master's and doctoral instruction will end March 13," U of M president David Barnard said in a statement.

"Instruction will be provided by other means that may include existing online platforms. This will continue through the end of the term on April 7."

Barnard also said all classes of any kind will be cancelled on Monday and Tuesday next week, a "two-day pause" to allow the university to prepare for the move to alternate modes of instruction. U of M campuses will remain open on those days.

The University of Manitoba is among the post-secondary institutions moving classes online to prevent the spread of novel coronavirus. (Jeff Stapleton/CBC)

The move follows a similar announcement at the University of Winnipeg, wherepresident Annette Trimbee released a statement on the school's website Friday morning.

"The time to act is now so that we may help preserve the health and safety of the UWinnipeg community," she said.

The term was set to end April3, and the school says it will communicate its completion plans to students by March 20 through webmail.

The University of Winnipeg Collegiate is also suspending classes and moving to alternative education methods.

Deans and department chairs are working with faculty on alternative ways to delivercourses, the statement says.

Study week at RRC

Also on Friday, Red River College said it would implement a study week for its students, effective at the end of the day and continuing until the end of next week.

"This will help us follow public health advice to reduce numbers on campus and give faculty and staff time to develop alternative delivery models for college programs and services," interim president and CEO Christine Watson said in a notice to RRC staff.

The campus will be closed to students and the public during the study week, whilestaff perform a "deep clean of campus facilities," the college said in an emailed statement Friday.

Brandon University will also be suspending classes for all of next week, although the campus will remain open.

In a statement, BU said the facility will operate in a fashion similar to reading week, with full staffing and all offices, services and the library remaining open. Classes and labs will be suspended but practicums will continue.

The university also encouraged students living in residence to relocate to an alternate place to live, if they have that option.

WATCH | Full news conference on suspending classes | March 13, 2020:

Closure of schools in Manitoba

4 years ago
Duration 35:42
The province is ending classes a week early for spring break and keeping kids out until April 13 to get ahead of COVID-19.

With files from Sam Samson