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Marin urges COVID-19 precautions at end-of-school-year events

Marin urges COVID-19 precautions at end-of-school-year events

Faced with an uptick in school-related COVID-19 outbreaks, Marin public health officials issued new safety guidelines Thursday for high school proms, graduations and other large end-of-year gatherings.

The officials sent a letter to schools attributing the “significant increase” in infections in part to “post-spring break exposures and attendance at indoor events and gatherings without masks.”

School officials who hold gatherings of more than 50 people are now “advised to consider” requiring proof of vaccination, proof of a negative rapid at-home antigen test and masks if the events are held indoors, said the letter, which was issued by Dr. Matt Willis, the county’s public health officer, and his deputy, Dr. Lisa Santora.

Most recently, 54 Redwood High School students tested positive after the school’s senior prom at San Francisco City Hall on April 16, Santora said.

“We estimate that more than 50% attended the prom,” she said.

Santora said the county “hasn’t done a comprehensive contact tracing for all of the cases,” but said that the school is complying with all notifications and other protocols.

About 1,000 students attended the event, where no masks or pre-event testing were required.

“If you have 1,000 kids gathering together in close proximity in one space, there is a likelihood that someone could be infectious,” Willis said Wednesday. “We want to make it as safe as possible.”

The Redwood outbreak came just a few weeks after more than 50 Marin middle school students tested positive after a spring break trip to Washington, D.C.

“We had a 57% attack rate” of COVID-19 for the students who went on the trip, Willis said.

In addition, at least two Marin elementary schools — Bacich in Kentfield and Coleman in San Rafael — experienced outbreaks before or after spring break. Coleman was forced to reinstate its indoor mask mandate for a few weeks.

“End-of-year school events and gatherings, including proms and graduation ceremonies, are significant and important life events for students and their families and friends,” the letter states. “But attending a large event or gathering of greater than 50 people — especially indoors and unmasked — increases the risk of COVID-19 exposure.”

“When COVID-19 community transmission levels are high, there is a 50% chance that at least one COVID-19 positive individual will be present at the event,” the letter said.

On a countywide level, Marin’s COVID-19 positive case count has doubled in the last three weeks, rising to an average of about 75 cases per day, Willis said. He said the county is now in the “high” transmission status, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

However, the vaccination rate for Marin teens is about 90%, and at least half of that population has been boosted, Willis said

“We also know that with the BA.2 subvariant, we’re not seeing a lot of hospitalizations,” he said, referring to the omicron mutation that is the now the dominant strain present in most virus infection cases.

Marin school officials said they have already planned to implement the precautions.

Tara Taupier, superintendent of the Tamalpais Union High School District, said students at Archie Williams High School in San Anselmo who attend the senior prom on April 30 at Regency Ballroom in San Francisco will be given at-home test kits to use the day of the event.

Willis said he understands that a student who tests positive on the day of the prom, for example, might be “heartbroken” because he or she would need to stay home.

“But it’s better than having a super-spreader event,” Willis said. “This is a good use for the home test — to make sure no one who is present is actively infectious.”

Leslie Benjamin, spokesperson for the Novato Unified School District, said officials at Novato and San Marin high schools will implement safety protocols prior to the proms in late May. Novato schools have already seen a bump in COVID cases, she said.

“We are following Marin public health guidelines in asking exposed students to wear a mask for five days,” Benjamin said. “In a couple of situations where more than two to three cases occurred in a classroom or cohort, we are strongly recommending that students wear a mask for five days.”

San Rafael and Terra Linda high schools also will have proms in May, and will add safety precautions, said Christina Perrino, spokesperson for San Rafael City Schools.

All students who attend a large gathering, especially indoors, should test before the event, according to the letter sent Thursday.

“Students and staff should complete a same-day, rapid antigen COVID-19 test prior to attending a large indoor event or gathering,” the letter states. “If they test positive (regardless of symptoms), they should stay home and isolate.”

After the event, they should monitor for symptoms and test five days later — or sooner if they develop symptoms.

In addition, after the event, “they should limit their contact with and wear a mask around persons who are immunocompromised or at high risk for severe illness until they test negative five days after attending the event,” the letter states.

Willis and Santora also recommend that students get vaccinated and boosted prior to attending large school gatherings.

“Parents or guardians should consider getting a second booster for adolescents 12 years and older who are moderately or severely immunocompromised,” they wrote. “Household members who are over 50 years old and immunocompromised or at high risk for severe illness should get a second booster.”

Willis said he is not advising high schools to cancel proms or other events — just to reduce risk when possible.

The new Marin guidelines come as at least one other Bay Area school — San Mateo High School — reported more than 90 positive COVID-19 cases after about 600 students attended a prom April 9 at the Asian Art Museum in San Francisco. Masks were “strongly recommended,” but many students chose not to wear them, a San Mateo Union High School District spokesperson told the Associated Press.

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GDC 2022 was a COVID-spreading event despite precautions by organizers

GDC 2022 was a COVID-spreading event despite precautions by organizers

Around 12,000 industry professionals attended the Game Developers Conference in person, some of which have reported COVID-positive cases since.

The Game Developers Conference (GDC) 2022 returned this year, hosting both an in-person and live event in San Francisco, California’s Moscone Center. The hosts took a risk on bringing industry professionals together, but tried to alleviate it (as several events have done) with health precautions and restrictions aimed at trying to keep attendees safe. However, it would seem those precautions weren’t entirely enough as numerous attendees are now reporting having tested positive for COVID-19 since the event.

GDC 2022 was hosted from March 21 to March 25, running at the Moscone Convention Center in San Francisco, California. It was to be the event’s first return to physical form after having canceled in-person attendance and hosting digital events for both GDC 2020 and GDC 2021. Where it was meant to be as safe a year as possible, featuring a number of health precautions including proof of vaccination, as well as proof of booster shot or a negative COVID-19 test to go with it. Unfortunately, it wasn’t long after the event that word circulated of a handful of the 12,000 attendees allegedly knowing they had COVID-19 and attending the show anyways, including one notable tweet by IndieCade Director of PartnershipsTiffany Otto.


Since then, several attendees of GDC 2022 have shared updates that they had tested positive for COVID-19 after leaving the event and experiencing symptons, such as Witch Beam Games artist and designer Wren Brier and Unity Senior Partner Relations Manager Unity Osama Dorias. Others claimed to have accidentally been in close contact with someone who was known to have tested positive either during or after the event. In all cases, it was suggested that affected attendees isolate and test for COVID for several days after the event due to the disease’s notable incubation period where sometimes symptoms don’t occur until days after the event.

Regardless, while there have been some gaming events such as CEO 2021 and Smash Ultimate Summit 4 that were seemingly and thankfully able to lock down COVID restrictions and ensure safety of most attendees, GDC 2022 is proving to be one that may have lasting consequences after the fact. With Apex Legends esports returning to in-person competition and EVO 2022 set to be a physical event as well, it remains to be seen if following events will fare better at safety. Nonetheless, COVID-19 is still most certainly a threat to live and heavily attended events and the efforts to provide reliable safety appear to still be a moving target in 2022.

TJ Denzer is a player and writer with a passion for games that has dominated a lifetime. He found his way to the Shacknews roster in late 2019 and has worked his way to Senior News Editor since. Between news coverage, he also aides notably in livestream projects like the indie game-focused Indie-licious, the Shacknews Stimulus Games, and the Shacknews Dump. You can reach him at tj.denzer@shacknews.com and also find him on Twitter @JohnnyChugs.