Rommie wrote:Ugh, that sucks SciFiFisher. I hope you guys stay healthy. Why do you think it got so bad in California btw? It sounded like they were being really proactive at the beginning of things.
One of my cousins was saying recently that her big concern is she has three kids, and three different schools, and it does not seem like the local schools are really coordinating with each other. So they might just homeschool all three because who can juggle all that? (Basically one middle school, one elementary, one still in preschool kid.)
Honestly, this school thing makes me angry because of course everyone wants kids back in school. And of course there was time to plan for it, and find money to do it, but the powers that be just clearly can't think of very basic things more than what's in front of them. Finally, of course it was much easier for my Dutch niece and nephew to head back to school in May when getting to that level was a national priority in lockdown over bars, and they were down to a few hundred cases tops. It's really not rocket science to realize that's a hugely different situation than what's going on in most states right now.
Rommie wrote:With a giant caveat of "if numbers go otherwise we are back at home because we are not idiots," might be going back to the office this fall in Cambridge.
Basically, a few reasons. First, I don't care what people say, I definitely work better in an office environment than at home- I definitely got programmed for "you work when at work, relax when at home," and can't really unlearn that. Second, I don't actually have to commute more than walking a few minutes, so that really minimizes a lot of risk in going to work, ie no public transit commute. Third, I currently only share my office with one other postdoc, who is arranging to work remotely from California this fall for personal reasons, so most of the day I'd be in the office solo. But fourth, by this fall I do hope we can have a few socially distant interactions with colleagues- we have a huge grassy area outside the office, where I met one for coffee a few weeks ago, and amazing how great it was to just chat about science together. My boss is actually also planning to head in this fall with the same in mind, and man even if I only got 1-2 interactions with him alone every week, I think it'd be worth it.
Mind, I don't think I'd be considering this if it were anywhere except New England in the USA, the way numbers are going. And we're all kind of operating under the assumption that Harvard is as a whole, which is basically "plan to hibernate after Thanksgiving if not earlier." But yeah, reading up on what studies are about w this virus, I think it should be a reasonable risk mitigation.
I'm kinda worried six weeks will be long enough to sink all those plans though the way things are going elsewhere.
Rommie wrote:Oh don't worry, this is an extra cautious dose of optimism. But some days you want to be a little optimistic.
Anyway, crazy stuff guys- I am typing these words from inside a library right now.
Our little one in town quietly reopened Tuesdays and Fridays for a trial run (bc three days is enough for the virus to die out if it were on any surfaces), and you can reserve one of the little rooms to study, some of which have their own little entrances (old building) so you don't even get close to anyone. I definitely needed a change of scenery to get some writing done (an easy way for me to break writer's block pre pandemic), so reserved one for this morning. Great so far! A door guard to keep track of the number of people in the building (10 tops), they sanitize the study areas between users, and I have the window open.
For me btw the fun thing is they legit have a little basket of cloth homemade masks when you come in at the main entrance that someone made and donated, right next to the mandatory hand sanitizer station. This strikes me as the most New England thing ever and I love it.
squ1d wrote:Things have been mostly good over here, although Victoria is currently experiencing a bit of a wildfire, and it remains to be seen if they can get it under control again. I'm EXTREMELY lucky being in WA, as we have no community spread at all, and life goes along "sort of" normally. But as we know, that could all change quite easily.
One thing that has occurred to me recently is that the philosophy of "rugged individualism" is incompatible with issues that require the sacrifice of minor individual freedoms in a swift and united manner. That focus on the individual and resentment of government interference is kind of the perfect storm for a pandemic.
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