Yet, the Senate goes on recess and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin: "We're not going to use taxpayer money to pay people more to stay home."
HELLOOOOOOOO!!! The 'people' were ALL taxpayers before being forced to stay home in an effort to save lives and slow down the pandemic!
2/2
@ChippySuave I want my federal tax dollars refunded for the entirely of 's term. We need to start a movement.
@ChippySuave
It's a pandemic. Paying them to stay home is exactly what we want to do.
If they've got their knickers in a twist that they're paid MORE to stay home, raise the fucking minimum wage.
@AlphaCentauri @ChippySuave I haven’t seen anyone discuss the fact that staying home 24 seven increases utility cost exponentially!
And food! Two kids came back home-- one when college closed, the other after his apt lease ended and he was forced to stop working due to the pandemic. With a 23, 21, and 15 yo at home, the weekly food bill is ridiculously high as food became more expensive.
@ChippySuave
Yes, and people here, people I know, people who PAY TAXES and work hard, are literally facing this decision: Either my child goes to school in person, or I have to quit my job to home/remote school them.
That's what we've gotten to in this pandemic. Job vs. health. One or the other.
And no, there's no reopening schools "safely". Haha. Please. There's no money to help with that, either -- in terms of
protective supplies, buildings, or salaries.
@janallmac Under the CARES Act, our school district, Virginia Beach was given $10.1M.
Seems like a lot!
But according the the American Federation of Teachers' analysis, the average school will need an additional $1.2 million, or $2,300 per student, to open its doors.
In Virginia Beach, we have 82 public schools and 5 secondary/post-secondary specialty centers. That comes to $116,211 per building, or using the statistic 66,820 students in the 2018-2019 year, that comes to $151 per student.
@ChippySuave
Oh gosh, look at you, with numbers and everything! I should know the numbers for my district; I don't, unfortunately.
I do know the physical buildings are too crowded to socially distance, and unless they're building new ones (and they're not) and hiring more teachers (and they're not) then there's no way we can socially distance properly.
And that doesn't even take into account masking and hand washing and testing.
Hm. Obviously not enough, but maybe that would help with improving the remote learning curriculum (?) and providing some laptops.
Still doesn't solve the job-vs-school problem, which is the big problem here, IMO.
And everyone knows if we open schools, Covid cases and deaths will increase, and the attitude seems to be shrug, oh well! Some (like my pediatrician) even admit that.
Crazy.
@janallmac I am privileged to live in a well to do school district.
Every child K-12 in public schools has been given a chromebook. Steps have been taken/are being implemented to insure each child has access to internet. And during the pandemic, free bagged meals have been made available to every student for every day, regardless of status, at 33 different sites.
I know other places are not nearly as lucky.
@ChippySuave
My school district is learning & improving.
We got blindsided by covid in the spring, and our remote learning system was not really meant for long-term use. The teachers really had to scramble!
But they've improved the system over the summer -- they've been working hard, I'm impressed. Chrome books have been provided for those who need them.
Still, there are parents with young kids who are faced with some incredibly tough decisions if they can't WFH.
@ChippySuave Also any money directed at people forced to stay at home is going straight back into the economy to buy groceries and pay rent.
Not like I could toss it on my hoard pile and roll around on it like a Treasury Sec^H^H^H dragon.