We are several weeks into the school year and some Connecticut school districts have sent students back home due to cases of COVID-19.
Some schools are closing and switching to remote learning while others are staying open and sending small groups home to quarantine.
Coverage of Coronavirus
Ansonia
An individual tested positive for COVID-19 at Ansonia Middle School. The person was last inside the district on Oct. 6. Officials have isolated this as specific to two Pre-k classrooms located in the modulars at Ansonia Middle School and to one classroom at Mead School. Under the advisement of the local health department, the three classrooms are being closed for 14 days.
Beacon Falls
An assistant football coach in Region 16 has tested positive for COVID-19, and 26 players who had contact with him have been instructed to quarantine, district officials said last Thursday. The student-athletes have been tested. No other COVID-19 cases have been reported in the district, which includes Beacon Falls and Prospect.
Berlin
Over the weekend, district officials said they learned another person within the school community tested positive for COVID-19. The affected person was instructed to remain home in self-isolation for 10 days.
Previously, officials said two members of the Berlin Public Schools community had tested positive for COVID-19. District officials said the two individuals were last at Griswold Elementary School on Friday, Sept. 18, and that close contacts were identified.
Bridgeport
Luis Munoz Marin School in Bridgeport will be closed for two weeks from Tuesday, October 13 through Monday, October 26. Students will participate in remote learning during the closure, and Grab n Go meals will still be available.
East Lyme
East Lyme High School is remote and will reopen on Oct. 22.
East Lyme High School was remote Monday after the school district learned of a case of COVID-19. A letter sent to families said they hoped to resume in-person learning at the high school on Tuesday. Then families were notified Wednesday that East Lyme High School would be remote for two weeks after learning of two additional COVID-19 cases in the school community.
Learning is remote for East Lyme High School and the school will reopen on Oct. 22. Sports and after school activities at the high school will be suspended.
All other buildings are open for students.
A letter from the superintendent on Oct. 4 said contact tracing was done at East Lyme Middle School and Niantic Center School based on last week’s COVID cases.
Fairfield
This brings the total number of students and staff in quarantine to more than 80.
“For the second week in a row, we find ourselves having to deal with the consequences of our students participating in weekend activities without masks and without appropriate social distancing. In this case, it wasn’t parties, but seemingly innocent activities like playing pick-up football or basketball, or any sponsored event,” Supt. Mike Cummings wrote last Wednesday.
Fairfield First Selectwoman Brenda Kupchick said there were six positive cases tied to the high school community: five at Fairfield Ludlowe High School and one at Fairfield Prep.
The infected individuals are all currently in isolation.
During contact tracing, the health department discovered there were at least six gatherings that weekend of high school students that might have led to these cases. Four of the events were attended by students who then tested positive for the virus.
Glastonbury
Of the students in quarantine, 16 are from Glastonbury High School, seven are from Smith Middle School, one is from Gideon Welles School, and one is from Buttonball Elementary School, according to school officials.
One staff member from Hopewell School and another from the bus yard are also in quarantine, the school district said.
One student at Glastonbury High School has tested positive for COVID-19.
The numbers listed for people in quarantine indicate people who were in direct contact with someone who tested positive, according to the school district.
Groton
Groton Middle School is distance learning for all students through Oct. 16. District officials said all students from both cohorts will be learning from home. Students are asked not to come to the building and no in-person classes will be held.
Hamden
A student at Hamden High School tested positive for COVID-19, according to Superintendent Jody Goeler.
The school district has reached out to anyone who had close contact with the student and provided them instructions on what steps to take, Goeler said in an email to parents. Students and staff who have not been in closed contact will remain in school.
Helen Street School in Hamden also reported a positive case earlier this month.
New Britain
Smith Elementary School in New Britain moved to remote learning after someone in the community tested positive for COVID-19.
District officials said that person will quarantine at home for 14 days. Several of their close contacts have also reported symptoms that might be COVID-19, and they have also been instructed to quarantine. The school was closed Tuesday and Wednesday. Officials plan to reopen for in-person learning on Thursday, pending the results of the contact tracing investigation.
There are other confirmed positive cases of COVID-19 at five schools in New Britain, according to the school district.
The positive cases are at New Britain High School, Pulaski Middle School, Lincoln Elementary School, Holmes Elementary School, and Chamberlain Elementary School.
For the high school and Lincoln Elementary School, the cases were determined to be isolated and those schools were open last Wednesday.
Because the district learned about the cases at Pulaski Middle School and Holmes Elementary school late in the day last Tuesday and they had not completed contact tracing, those schools moved to remote learning last Wednesday and Thursday, the district said. Those schools returned to in-person learning on Friday.
The district was notified about the case at Chamberlain Elementary last Wednesday afternoon. The New Britain Department of Public Health determined the individual had no close contacts with anyone else in the building and the school will remain fully open, according to the district.
Also in New Britain, a member of the CLIMB Program tested positive for COVID-19, according to the school district.
The school district was notified of the positive case last Friday afternoon and the person has been told to remain home and quarantine for 14 days.
The last day this person was at the program was on Sept. 21, school officials said.
Last Friday, cases were reported at the Lincoln KEY Program, Roosevelt Early Learning Center, and Smith Elementary School.
Roosevelt Early Learning Center and two classrooms at the Lincoln KEY Program will move to remote learning for two weeks, resuming in-person on Monday, Oct. 19. There will be no closures at Smith.
New Canaan
In New Canaan, 53 students were quarantining at home after four classmates tested positive for coronavirus. The students who quarantined were determined to have close contact with the students who tested positive. Those four students were not included in the quarantine count, according to the superintendent.
Three of the four cases at the high school appear to be connected through youth sports activities, according to the superintendent.
As of Thursday, one staff member at New Canaan High School has COVID-19 and five students and 12 staff members are quarantining due to close contact, according to the dashboard. One student at Saxe Middle School has COVID-19 and six students and one staff member are quarantining due to close contact.
One staff member at South Elementary School is in quarantine due to close contact.
One staff member at West Elementary School tested positive for COVID-19 and 13 students and three staff members are in quarantine due to close contact.
North Branford
School officials said administrators were notified that a member of the North Branford High School community tested positive for the COVID-19 virus and immediate action was taken to isolate, perform contact tracing and notify anyone who was in close contact with this person.
Norwich
Norwich Public Schools announced all students moved to remote learning for two weeks beginning last Friday. There are no active cases in the schools, but the city has seen a climb in COVID-19 cases and administrators made the decision to keep students learning from home as a precaution.
Plainfield
A staff member within the Plainfield High School community has tested positive for COVID-19.
The district said the person was been instructed to remain home and quarantine for 14 days.
The last day the person was in Plainfield High School was Sept. 21.
Plainfield High School was closed from Monday, Sept. 28 through Wednesday, Sept. 30. Volleyball was also canceled for the week.
Preston
The infected person was instructed to remain home in self-isolation for 14 days and family members were also instructed to self-quarantine and get tested.
Simsbury
A support staff member at Simsbury High School tested positive for COVID-19. After determining that the staff member had no close contacts while working at the school, the district determined the school can remain open.
Southington
All classes at Southington High School are remote through Friday, Oct. 9.
The school district was not able to fill that many positions with substitute teachers, according to Superintendent Timothy Connellan. The district hopes to have students return to in-person learning on Tuesday, Oct. 13, barring any new positive cases.
A person at Hatton Elementary School also tested positive for coronavirus. That person and anyone who was determined to be in close contact with them will quarantine at home for 14 days. Students and staff who did not come in close contact with the infected person will be at school for in-person learning.
Stratford
Bunnell High School closed after two additional people tested positive for COVID-19 and plans to resume the hybrid model on Oct. 12 .
School officials said in a letter on Sept. 25 that the high school was closed and students would be distance learning for two weeks.
School officials said they were notified of two additional positive COVID-19 cases within the Bunnell High School community. Anyone who was directly in contact with either person who tested positive will be contacted and should remain in quarantine for 14 days, they said.
The plan is to resume the hybrid model on Oct. 12, school officials added.
Trumbull
Hillcrest Middle School was closed to all students because of a case of COVID-19. Learning will be remote while the school is closed and students in Cohort B were able to re-enter the building on Thursday, Oct. 1, according to a statement from the principal.
[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uC2RooXr7e0&w=560&h=315]Waterbury
A student at Tinker Elementary School has tested positive for COVID-19, according to the city's website. The student who tested positive for COVID-19 has been instructed to remain home in self-isolation for 10 days and will need medical documentation before returning to in-person classes.
A student at Rotella Interdistrict Magnet School, who is enrolled in the virtual
academy, tested positive for COVID-19.
Three students at West Side Middle School, who are enrolled in the virtual
academy, tested positive for COVID-19.
A student at Driggs Elementary School has tested positive for COVID-19. As a
precaution, all the students in the two classes will transition to distance learning
through Wednesday, Oct. 14. The student who tested positive for COVID-19 has been instructed to remain home in self-isolation for 10 days.
A student at Waterbury Career Academy High School, who is enrolled in the
virtual academy, tested positive for COVID-19. The student has been learning from home since the first day of school and has not been in the school building.
A staff member at Gilmartin Elementary School has tested positive for COVID-19.
As a precaution, the specific class will transition to distance learning through
Wednesday, Oct. 14. The staff member who tested positive for COVID-19 has been instructed to remain home in self-isolation for 10 days.
A staff member at Bunker Hill Elementary School has tested positive for COVID19 and has been instructed to remain home in self-isolation for 10 days.
A student at Crosby High School in Waterbury tested positive for COVID-19. The school remained closed to in-person learning Wednesday for a thorough cleaning and disinfection. In-person classes were expected to resume Thursday.
A student at Washington Elementary School tested positive for COVID-19, school officials said last Friday. That student's specific class transitioned to distance learning through Monday, Oct. 12.
Last Wednesday, district officials announced a student at North End Middle School tested positive for the coronavirus. That student is virtual and has not been in the building this year.
District officials announced last Tuesday that two people at Chase Elementary School tested positive for COVID-19. Both classes will move to distance learning through Friday, Oct. 9.
A staff member at Waterbury Arts Magnet School tested positive for the coronavirus. The school shifted to remote learning through Thursday while the building was cleaned and disinfected and contact tracers notify those affected.
The city's contact tracing team is working to identify close contacts involved with the in-person positive case.
Waterford
The Friendship School in Waterford reported a case of COVID-19 and said the person who tested positive was instructed to remain home in self-isolation for 10 days.
School officials said in a message to members of the school community that they were notified last Monday that a member of our school community has tested positive for coronavirus and that family members have also been instructed to self-quarantine and get tested.
Anyone who is considered a close contact with the person has been contacted or will be contacted by school or local health officials