Austin High School closed Monday because of rising COVID-19 cases, becoming the first school in the Austin Independent School District to shut down this semester because of the virus.
The school had a large number of cases pop up in a short period of time, prompting the district to close it, AISD’s Director of Health Services Alexandra Copeland said during a news conference Monday.
“Right now, we have had multiple cases on the campus, but they are isolated so it’s been a controlled outbreak, not an uncontrolled outbreak,” Copeland said. “But we just wanted to just add some security for this community and just be proactive for them.”
AISD invited students and staff who have been in the building for in-person classes or extracurricular activities to get tested. The district hosted drive-thru testing Monday at the school. Copeland said she and Austin Public Health will review the test results over the next few days to decide if the school needs to stay closed longer.
Students are learning remotely through Wednesday. The current plan is to bring them back to campus. Thursday unless the testing data indicates the district should do otherwise.
Copeland said there is not a specific number of COVID-19 cases that prompts a school to close.
“Everything is done on a case-by-case basis,” Copeland said. “So, we want to look at transmission and whether it’s happening on or off the campus. We want to look at how controlled the outbreak is, and I also consult with Austin Public Health and Dr. Mark Escott whenever we have cases.”
Copeland encouraged AISD families to be safe and avoid gathering in large groups as Thanksgiving approaches, so COVID-19 stays out of schools.
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