Page 8 Spilyay Tymoo, Warm Springs, Oregon September 9, 2020 Warm Springs Early Childhood Center covid safety plan The Warm Springs Early Childhood Education takes the health and safety of our employees and families very seriously. With the spread of the coronavirus or Covid-19, the respiratory disease caused by the SARS-CoV-2 virus, Warm Springs Early Child- hood Education must re- main vigilant in mitigating the outbreak. We have been deemed “essential” during this De- clared National Emergency. In order to be safe and main- tain operations, we have de- veloped this Covid-19 Expo- sure Prevention, Prepared- ness, and Response Plan to be implemented, to the ex- tent feasible and appropriate. Plan elements Constant disinfection of all toys, high-touch surfaces, and outdoor equipment be- tween individual use as well as the classroom is our new policy. All of our teachers have been trained on these new Covid-19 guidelines prior to opening our doors and as Centers for Disease Control- Oregon Health Authority guidelines evolve they will be kept up to date on any changes. Each of our classrooms are considered ‘stable groups,’ meaning they do not have interactions with chil- dren or teachers from other classrooms. Each of our stable groups has a designated pick up/ drop off time which is stag- gered to prevent overcrowd- ing at the front of the build- My name is Kim Schmith and as a candidate for Jefferson County Commissioner I be- lieve it is vital I be accessible to our communities throughout the cam- paigning cycle and beyond, to better hear the vision of the residents of Jefferson County. I have specifically been asked by sev- eral people in the Warm Springs com- munity to come and sit, to be publicly available for people ing. If a child misses their drop off time the parent/ guardian can enter the build- ing wearing a mask, and a front desk staff member will take the child to their class- room. We have incorporated Google Classrooms for our Head Start 2020-2021 year and are offering distance learning. The links to these classrooms are on our website at all times, please call for your code to join. Every parent and guard- ian will be asked health ques- tions regarding Covid-19. If there is a concerning symp- tom or answer during those health questions parents and guardians will be instructed to have the child tested and receive a negative Covid test before they can re-enter the building. Upon entering the build- ing from drop off, playground time, or a walk each class- room has been instructed to wash their hands. Because of the increase in hand wash- ing we have extra handwashing stations throughout the building. Each class has access to their own bathroom area to ensure there is no secondary mixing of stable groups via high touch surfaces in the stalls or sinks. During meal times we have eliminated family style meals and each child is given options from all food types by their teacher or teachers that is handled by them alone. Those staff who are not a part of any of our stable groups are required to be in full PPE and wash and sani- to voice their visions of Jefferson County and how, if I have the honor tize their hands before en- tering a classroom. This in- cludes staff who are con- ducting health checks, float- ers/roavers, janitorial staff, coaches, visiting parents, ect. Our janitorial staff disin- fect all outdoor equipment between classroom use as well as constantly wipe down all high touch surface areas in the hallways and lobby area. They complete rounds every hour and are assigned to their own designated pod or area within the building. All staff have been trained to call into the build- ing before their shift to no- tify the front desk and coor- dinators if they are experi- encing any of the Covid-19 symptoms to prevent con- tamination. We are doing ongoing ran- dom Covid-19 testing of our staff per Tribal regulations. These measures have been put in place to ensure that in the event of a posi- tive case within our building that the exposure is limited to a single classroom instead of the entire building. Ac- cording to the Centers for Disease Control and the Or- egon Health Authority guide- lines— because we have stable groups with limited ac- cess to other classrooms and areas in the event of an ex- posure—we are only required to close that area while the rest of the building remains open. We found that disinfect- ing the entire building ensures the safety of our families and staff in that there is no ques- tion if their area was cleaned or not. of serving as Jefferson County Commissioner, I can best serve the people In the event that a Covid- 19 positive staff member or child is in our building or a staff member or child comes in contact with a Covid-19 positive person outside of work hours, we have a plan in place. This plan includes two scenarios and procedures for potential Covid-19 contamination within our building and they will be broken down as such. Scenario 1: In the event one of our teachers, staff or children comes in direct contact with a person who has tested posi- tive for Covid-19 outside of school-child care hours: We will confirm with IHS and Community Health who the Covid-19 positive person is along with the contamina- tion level of our staff or families. That person or family will be immediately told to go test and be put on a manda- tory two week quarantine. If any symptoms appear within that 14-day quarantine they will be asked to test again. They will now be consid- ered presumptive positive. Scenario 2 will be started. If no symptoms appear within that 14 day quaran- tine they will be re-admitted into the building with a nega- tive Covid-19 test document submitted. No notification will be is- sued to any staff or family as this person is not positive for the virus. Teachers/staff in the classroom/area are already cleaning, disinfecting, using of Warm Springs. I’ll be sitting at a table diagonally across from the post office on Thursday, Septem- ber 24 th from 4- 5:30pm, Monday, October 5 th from 3- 4pm, and Wednes- day, October 14 th from 4-5:30pm. People are always welcome to send me an email: kimschmith26@gmail. com. Please Contact me if there is a specific event you would like me to attend. Kim Schmith gloves, and keeping their dis- tance so no other steps need to be taken. Scenario 2: In the event one of our teachers, staff of children tests positive for Covid-19 and has been in their class- room or other building ar- eas: If a teacher, staff or child who on a mandatory two week quarantine comes back positive we will double confirm their positive with IHS and Community Health. If a teacher or staff member does a random test and comes back positive we will confirm with IHS and Community Health. We will assess the child or staff member’s range of ex- posure within the building and immediately notify fami- lies and co-workers who had direct contact with the teacher, staff member or child and instruct them to test and to go into a two- week quarantine. If an exposure happens in your child’s classroom, you will be notified immedi- ately. If you do not receive a text or email from us regard- ing exposure and to be tested then your child or children, and classroom was not ex- posed to the virus via the Covid-19 positive teacher, staff member or child. We will immediately con- tact Russell Graham to no- tify him that one of our classrooms or other areas has been contaminated with Covid-19 and needs clean- ing. Our building will be im- mediately shut down for cleaning. As soon as our building is clean and given the green light, we will open back up. An email or text will go out to our families informing them of our status. Our website and public calendar will be updated as well. However, the classroom or area where the contami- nation occurred will remain shut down for the entire two-week period. If your child is in Head Start and their classroom is shut down for quarantine online classes will remain in effect for those two weeks to ensure all children have access to their daily lessons. Please reach out to staff to get access to your child’s online classroom or visit our website for the direct link. This is a living document and as such plans are sub- ject to change due to evolv- ing CDC/OHA guidelines. The most current informa- tion will be updated once we have received it. If you have any questions or con- cerns please feel free to con- tact us at 541-553-3242, email or visit us on our website where this document will be posted. Sincerely, Shyrelle Hur tado, Health Coordinator, Warm Springs Early Childhood Education, 1257 Kot-num Rd/P.O. Box C, War m Springs. s.hurtado@wstribes.org Toward extension of the Columbia Basin fish accords Tribal, federal and state officials are negotiating an extension of the Columbia Basin fish accords, but some entities are urging Idaho Gov. Brad Little to not sign anything that could under- cut his Salmon Workgroup. The diverse group of stakeholders is entering the home stretch of its more than one year of meetings, brainstorming and collabo- ration aimed at delivering a set of salmon recovery policy recommendations to the governor. The accords, first signed in 2008, are agreements among individual states and tribes and the so-called ac- tion agencies—the Army Corps of Engineers, Bureau of Reclamation and the Bonneville Power Adminis- tration. In part, the states and tribes agreed to publicly support the federal govern- ment’s plans to blend dam operation with the needs of the fish, and to settle any dif- ferences out of court. In exchange, the states and tribes received billions of dollars of funding for salmon recovery projects. The accords were ex- tended in 2018, but are set to expire next month when the federal government is- sues its final plan, known as a record of decision, to op- erate Snake and Columbia river dams in a way that doesn’t put the fish at fur- ther risk of extinction. Little’s Salmon Work- group is scheduled to deliver a set of policy recommen- dations in about four months that are expected to aim con- siderably higher—at actions that could lead to recovery of Idaho’s wild anadromous fish runs to healthy and harvestable numbers.