-
Posts
6,905 -
Joined
-
Last visited
Content Type
Gallery
Profiles
Forums
Events
Everything posted by That's No Moon
-
Not necessarily. Lots of explosive things have other uses, such as fertilizer.
-
The word cat can also refer to people. It's colloquial.
-
Bates, or Boettger I think
-
The key word here is safe return and "the medical community" is not advocating for all schools just to open and have kids there 5 days a week in all circumstances. Here's a quote from that link and this is where the problem comes in. "Local school leaders, public health experts, educators and parents must be at the center of decisions about how and when to reopen schools, taking into account the spread of COVID-19 in their communities and the capacities of school districts to adapt safety protocols to make in-person learning safe and feasible. For instance, schools in areas with high levels of COVID-19 community spread should not be compelled to reopen against the judgment of local experts. A one-size-fits-all approach is not appropriate for return to school decisions. Reopening schools in a way that maximizes safety, learning, and the well-being of children, teachers, and staff will clearly require substantial new investments in our schools and campuses." I'm not saying schools shouldn't re-open or that there aren't substantial benefits to kids in having the buildings open. Clearly there are. What I'm saying is that the guidance that exists does not work in so many circumstances that it is virtually useless. There has been no substantial investment in the campuses. There is no way to distance people safely in the structures that many districts have. There are 930 students in the building I work in. My class sizes range from 30-38. The kids sit on top of one another. There is no place to spread them out. There are no unused classrooms in our building there is no money to procure trailers to add additional classrooms and definitely no money to add staff to teach in those classrooms. So we then start talking about staggering schedules. OK, well if a kid is in school twice a week and home the other three, or whatever break out you want, you haven't solved the core reason why so many people want the buildings open, so the parents can go back to work. So what you will have still is a situation where parents either need to be home for kids who are too young to watch themselves, leave the kids home alone, or try to find some sort of day care option that A. has space, B. they can afford, and C. will accept a kid for a select number of days per week. Here's another example of how the guidance doesn't work. The most recent thing I've heard is to have kids in self-contained pods with one teacher. Well, that works for elementary school just fine. That doesn't work in high school. The teacher who teaches 11th grade English isn't qualified to teach calculus. They aren't certified to do so, they don't have the expertise to do so, and it's not something you can quickly pick up in 3 weeks to be able to do. So either the kids or the teachers need to move. Again working on this pod idea. It is virtually impossible to create a pod of kids at the high school level who are all in the same level of classes across the board. So again, you are either moving the kids around so they can get what they need or you are moving the teachers around. There isn't a way to do that sort of thing at that level. My school is a middle school so it's a bit of all of these issues. The 6th graders are too young to manage themselves at home, everyone moves to different classes and has different levels, you have many teachers who aren't cross trained to teach everything (I am certified to teach every subject and Spec Ed. I'm the only one in my building like that). So how do you do this in a way that achieves people's goals and yet is still safeish. There are simple problems that I still haven't heard an answer to such as transportation. How do you socially distance on a bus? In order to follow guidelines kids would have to be no more than one to a seat. That cuts your capacity in at least half and younger kids often sit 3 to a seat. There isn't a pool of empty buses (or people to drive them) just sitting around. Staggering schedules might address some of that but then you get into the other issues I mentioned as well as a host more. I work with our transportation company pretty closely coordinating sports buses and I can tell you that they don't have enough drivers in a regular year and a lot of the drivers they have are older people. That is going to be a disaster. Substitute teachers are similar. Lots are retired teachers. You can't compel them to take assignments, they are able to pick and choose where, when, and if they want to work. I'm expecting MANY of them not to be working this year. So when you have a teacher get sick there isn't going to be a replacement. Again, we have trouble getting subs in a regular year. If we have more than 5 people out in a day normally the additional spots don't get filled. On a Monday or a Friday in the winter it's more like 3 and we can have 10-15 people out sometimes in a regular year. When that happens, and the spots don't get picked up, administrators teach class and/or we consolidate classes into the gym or the auditorium and do what we need to do to get through the day. Well, if you are distancing you can't consolidate classes like that so what do you do? We only have 3 administrators.
-
And decided among themselves.
-
Because people don't do what they are told.
-
It's 97 in Philly today. Everything is fine. Play the game! I mean Florida is super cold this time of year also so when the snow melts there I'm sure it will tone down.
-
You're right. It's just a made up thing. Nothing actually happens. It's all part of a world-wide conspiracy. I have nothing to be concerned about with schools reopening either. My asthmatic wife will be fine as well. As will by diabetic father and my mother who is coming off cancer treatment. My kids as well they will be fine. Kids don't sick except the ones that do. Everything will be great and this will disappear. Bunch of hullabaloo over nothing I tells ya.
-
And how does that work in a high school? Also, it's not just teachers, we are going to blow through bus drivers like you wouldn't believe and there aren't enough of them to begin with
-
Really? The medical community or the medical community that got told to rewrite all the guidelines a couple weeks ago or just the medical community on the channel you watch.
- 480 replies
-
- 12
-
-
And it often takes two weeks to show up so no I don't think it was from this weekend.
-
Crazy. But it's like some person said, if we test less we will have fewer positives so maybe the solution here is just not to test players anymore so we have no more positive results and baseball can continue. That's how this works right?
-
Maybe the Marlins won't have enough people to field a team and since there is no minor league baseball this year they can't call up 12 guys to fill the roster.
-
And it's their fault that Florida has done whatever they feel like for months now? What a shock that the first team to blow up is from Florida. I'm amazed.
- 480 replies
-
- 14
-
-
-
-
Still took two of three from the Phillies....
-
Charges against Ed Oliver dismissed
That's No Moon replied to FluffHead's topic in The Stadium Wall Archives
No, but if you have a public defender and 2 felony charges pending you'll get told to take a plea. -
Blue Jays "Buffalo2020" thread
That's No Moon replied to PromoTheRobot's topic in Off the Wall Archives
Rick Vaughn comes to mind. Pre glasses. -
Charges against Ed Oliver dismissed
That's No Moon replied to FluffHead's topic in The Stadium Wall Archives
Turns out more than you'd think. -
Charges against Ed Oliver dismissed
That's No Moon replied to FluffHead's topic in The Stadium Wall Archives
Now ask yourself what would have happened if the person pulled over couldn't afford a decent lawyer. -
Wegmans not interested in stadium naming rights
That's No Moon replied to YoloinOhio's topic in The Stadium Wall Archives
When a big part of your household income comes from an industry you tend to learn a lot about it and pay attention to things lots of people don't. Sugar Mama pays a lot of bills, hence I know a lot about groceries. ? -
Wegmans not interested in stadium naming rights
That's No Moon replied to YoloinOhio's topic in The Stadium Wall Archives
It would except restaurants have been closed for awhile and I'm sure their cash flow sucks right now Yes, and all of that is tax deductible. A stadium naming deal is not. -
Wegmans not interested in stadium naming rights
That's No Moon replied to YoloinOhio's topic in The Stadium Wall Archives
They really aren't. Produce is often a big differentiator, as are service deli, butcher and prepared food. Some stores have in house butchers, some don't, it makes a difference. Some have a service deli counter some are all prepacked, some have prepared food some don't some is good some is not. The center store is often similar but not the same as some stores have many fewer products and more own brands, some have 20 kinds of mustard (no joke). The meat stores get all comes from different suppliers and it can be very different quality. The produce comes from different places too and some stores are ok with having B produce on the shelf and some aren't. Some stores are really good at staffing the departments and rotating stock and keeping things fresh, some are not. They are the same in that they all sell food, yes that's true, but they all have their own differences. I like Wegmans and Harris Teeter generally. Publix and Kroger are a little hit or miss. I hate Food Lion. Acme, Giant and Shop Rite are most of what I have locally and they are pretty much a toss up though I prefer Acme's meats. The other thing WNY people need to realize is Wegmans outside of WNY are a little different than those in WNY. They are usually bigger and more of a destination type store than what you typically find in the WNY home market area and there are many fewer of them. I haven't been to every Wegmans in WNY but for the 3 or 4 I've been to often enough to make comment that is the case. Edit: yes I know Kroger owns Harris Teeter now. -
Wegmans not interested in stadium naming rights
That's No Moon replied to YoloinOhio's topic in The Stadium Wall Archives
Southeast PA. Admittedly I'm not in Wegmans often but I feel like every time I'm there they are .69 I'm sort of trained to look whether I'm buying them or not and I'm usually taking pictures of some sort of produce when I'm in a store. Like I said though, if they are .49 it's because customers in the area are demanding that price point and the rest of the prices in produce are suffering for it. It doesn't cost less to get bananas in WNY than it does in the city where they unload a lot of them off the boats. In fact it probably costs significantly more when you factor transportation costs into the mix. You pay for those .49 bananas in every other item in the department. -
Wegmans not interested in stadium naming rights
That's No Moon replied to YoloinOhio's topic in The Stadium Wall Archives
That's kinda the idea, but it helps drive incremental sales.