Texas school district has never required masks or distancing — and students are thriving: 'It's not that difficult if you really put the needs of kids first'



A rural school district in Texas defied the experts and orders from its government masters when it came to face masks and social distancing in reaction to the coronavirus pandemic. Instead of bowing to pressure, the district worked with parents to open schools in August without COVID restrictions or mandates — and by all accounts, the students are thriving.

What happened?

Peaster Independent School District has had no distancing, no required face masks, and no mandatory quarantines since school started last August, KTVT-TV reported Monday. The students have had a "100% normal school experience" this school year – nothing has been canceled and no one has been quarantined.

"And the kids in Peaster, Texas, have thrived," Superintendent Lance Johnson told the outlet.

It all goes back to a decision last year that virtual schooling would not be successful for this community, KTVT said.

PISD surveyed families to see what they wanted for their kids and what they would be comfortable with. According to KTVT, 55% of parents said they would send their students to school if masks and social distancing were required for all grades. When the district asked about offering a school year as close to normal as possible, that number jumped to 86%.

And it appears to have paid off. The school year started on time in August, and nobody has looked back.

In the district of more than 1,400 students, only eight students are still learning online.

Daily attendance now is higher than it was a year ago.

There were only about a dozen more teacher absences in the fall over a year ago, but no cases of COVID-19 in the first 10 weeks of the school year among students or staff. Only a few COVID cases were recorded by the end of 2020 — and no cases have been recorded this year, KTVT said.

District data shows that most students in PISD will finish the year at grade level, the station noted, as the district has closed the learning gaps that were created when schools shut down in the spring.

How'd they do it?

According to Johnson, the teachers, school board, and community "stood in solidarity to ... do what is best for kids — and what's best for kids is having them in school in front of that teacher learning in a traditional school model."

Personal responsibility played a big part, Johnson said. Any students or teachers who felt ill stayed home, recovered, and came back when they were healthy.

It all comes down to doing their jobs, the superintendent said.

"It's real simple. We've just done it," he said. "It's not that difficult if you really put the needs of kids first."

Overjoyed Fox host Will Cain celebrates Texas’ reopening in packed diner: ‘This is freedom right here’



Fox News host Will Cain went viral for celebrating freedom at a crowded Texas diner amid Texas' statewide reopening.

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott (R) announced in early March that the statewide mask mandate would be rescinded and businesses could reopen at 100% capacity if they so desired beginning on March 9.

What are the details?

A clearly excited Cain appeared at a crowded Texas diner on Wednesday, where he interviewed customers.

"Fox & Friends" host Steve Doocy introduced Cain on Wednesday morning, who appeared at Bill Smith's Cafe in McKinney, Texas, for a Breakfast with Friends event via livestream.

"Let me show you what 100% capacity looks like," Cain said. "This is freedom right here."

Later in the segment, Cain spoke with a diner who said that states should never have been locked down during the COVID-19 pandemic.

"Here in Texas, we probably closed down a little too tight," he said. "Gov. Abbott has changed. You look at New York and California, they have stuck with the lockdown process. [Gov. Ron] DeSantis in Florida left his state very wide open, had a high percentage of at-risk people, and performed well."

Elsewhere during the clip, Cain introduced criminal defense attorney Roland Monteros.

"Assess the situation and think for yourself," Monteros said. "Like Rush Limbaugh wanted us to do. Think for yourself. Don't do what Rush would do. Don't do what you think Walt Disney would do. Do what you would do after you assess the situation. Think for yourself."

Cain also spoke with a diner named Gus, a retired New York City police sergeant, who moved to Texas from New York City a decade ago.

During the exchange, Cain asked what brought Gus to Texas.

"I like my guns, and I lean a certain way, and I came here to assimilate," Gus said to a round of applause from other diners.

When it comes to mask-wearing, Cain ultimately said that people should be left to make their own choices.

"People treat people as adults, not children, and they'll make adult decisions," he said. "Responsible decisions."

Fox News visits diner packed to '100% capacity' with mask-free Texans www.youtube.com

(H/T: Mediaite)

Dr. Fauci insists that now is not the time to ease COVID-19 restrictions despite falling numbers and vaccine availability



Infectious diseases expert Dr. Anthony Fauci said this week that states should not ease COVID-19 restrictions too quickly despite infection numbers continuing to fall.

Fauci's remarks came on the heels of Texas' and Mississippi's governors announcing plans to reduce, and in some cases, entirely eliminate, statewide COVID-19 restrictions, including public mask requirements.

What are the details?

On Wednesday, Fauci told CNN's Erin Burnett that opening states at 100% and eliminating their mask mandates is "ill-advised" from a "public health standpoint."

"We had [previously] had rebounds, which were very troublesome," Fauci added. "What we don't need right now is another surge.

"I understand the need to want to get back to normality, but you're only going to set yourself back if you just completely push aside the public health guidelines — particularly when we're dealing with anywhere from 55 [thousand] to 70,000 infections per day in the United States," he continued.

During the interview, Burnett played a clip of Sen. John Cornyn (R-Texas) remarking that COVID-19 restrictions were "arbitrary" — and Fauci vehemently disagreed.

"They're not arbitrary," he insisted. "They're based on evidence and data from science. We know that these interventions work, it's very clear: When you implement them, you see the cases go down. When you pull back, the cases go up."

Vaccines are becoming more available

Fauci also insisted that the United States has a chance to get ahead of the COVID-19 pandemic as vaccines are becoming more widely available to citizens.

"Right now, we project that the clinical trials will give us information that by the time we get to the fall, high school students will be able to be vaccinated," he added. "I'm not sure if it's going to be by the first day of school, but sometime in the fall."

"Now's not the time to pull back," Fauci insisted. "Now's the time to really crush this thing by doing both public health measures and accelerating the vaccinations like we're doing."

Infectious disease expert Dr. Anthony Fauci tells @ErinBurnett that states lifting mask mandates is "ill-advised."… https://t.co/fgdLgu73NX
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