All schools in Garden Valley, Red River Valley divisions move to remote learning on Tuesday - Action News
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Manitoba

All schools in Garden Valley, Red River Valley divisions move to remote learning on Tuesday

Students in two southern Manitoba school divisions will move to remote learning starting Tuesday as COVID-19 caseloads continue to rise across the province, officials say.

The shift will affect all 27 schools in the divisions and last until May 30, education minister says

Earlier this week, kindergarten to Grade 12 students in Winnipeg and Brandon moved to remote learning until the end of the month. (Jeff Stapleton/CBC)

Students in two southern Manitoba school divisions will move to remote learning starting Tuesday as COVID-19 caseloads continue to rise across the province, officials say.

The shift will affect all 14 schools inthe Winkler-area Garden Valley School Divisionand all 13in the Red River Valley School Division, Education Minister Cliff Cullen said on a call with reporters Saturday.

Students in those divisions will join pupilsin Winnipeg and Brandon who already moved to remote learning on Wednesday in learning from homeuntil May 30.

The move means 373 of the province's 820 schools have now shifted to remote learning, said Cullen, whowas joined on Saturday's call by Dr. Jazz Atwal, Manitoba's deputy chief public health officer.

The two divisions had a combined student population of more than 6,800 in the 2019-20 school year, according to the province.

In addition, the Franco-Manitoban School Division says three of its schools in the area are affected by the announcement and will move to remote learning Sainte AgatheSchool, Ral BrardCommunity Schooland Saint-Jean Baptiste Regional School.

A spokesperson for the province couldn't say if those schools were in addition to the ones announced, but said "schools may make their own decisions."

With more than half of Manitoba adults now vaccinated with at least one dose against COVID-19 and everyone 12 and up eligible to book appointments, Cullen said he's optimistic that students will return to classrooms to finish the year.

But the sudden switch demonstratesthat the pandemic is always evolving, he said.

"This just serves as a warning for other areas around the province that this indeed could could happen to their school as well. So try to be prepared as much as you can."

Manitoba reported 430 new COVID-19 cases on Saturday, including 27 in the Southern Health Region, which includes both the Garden Valley and Red River Valley school divisions.

The province also reportedfour more deaths linked to the illness three of which were people who contracted the B117 coronavirus variant first identified in the U.K.

Highly transmissible variants now account for nearly 60 per cent of Manitoba's active COVID-19 cases.

Cullen urged Manitobans to follow the province's most recent set of pandemic rules, which were tightened again last week.

"This is an important and critical time in our pandemic response," he said, a day after public health officials unveiled modelling that showed COVID-19 dailycase countsand intensive care admissions areexceeding Manitoba's most extreme projected scenarios for the third wave.

'Last resort' decision

While Saturday's remote learning update was announced at an unusual weekend news conference, Atwalsaid decisions like sending students from two divisions home "aren't knee-jerk reactions."

"We just don't look at one number or one case in a school and we say there's risk in a community," he said. Discussions with public health teams happened on Friday but the final call to close more classrooms wasn't made until Saturday, said Atwal.

"This is something we always do not want to do from a public health perspective, is to look at remote learning for schools. But when it seems to be the most viable option to limit that community transmission, then we have to act on that information."

Dr. Jazz Atwal is Manitoba's acting deputy Manitoba chief public health officer. (John Woods/The Canadian Press)

Atwal said it takes public health workers time to complete contact tracing investigations and new data about where COVID-19 is spreading changes hour by hour.

Moving students out of the classroom is "a measure of last resort," Atwalsaid, and a continued increase in cases many of which were linked to gatherings outside of school forced the decision.

The move affects schools such as Winkler's Garden Valley Collegiate, which alone has a student population of around800.

The Red River Valley division includes schools in communities south of Winnipeg such as Sanford, Starbuck and Morris.