[ad_1]
Article content
The start of the school year is upon us and we at Ontario School Safety (OSS) are concerned the Ontario government has yet to share any sort of plan to improve air quality in our schools to make it safer for students and staff.
Why is clean air important? Ventilation and filtration in school buildings and buses are our first lines of defence against air pollution and infectious diseases. If students are required to attend school under the Ontario Education Act, then the Ontario government is responsible for providing a safe and healthy environment — including clean air.
Article content
Last fall, Ontario students were hit hard by the “tripledemic” of flu, RSV, and COVID-19. Ottawa’s children’s hospital had to call in the Red Cross because they were so overwhelmed.
This year’s tripledemic season is predicted to be worse as a result of wildfire smoke exposure and a failure to make the changes to schools and buses needed to avoid it.
If last year’s tripledemic led to the near-collapse of health care systems nationwide, then we should be doing everything in our power to improve indoor air quality in schools to make sure it doesn’t happen again.
We know last year, absences due to illness were drastically higher than previous years for both students and education workers. Illness in schools has a direct effect on the health of the community and the economy. Everyone suffers when we do nothing about improving indoor air quality in Ontario schools and buses.
We need our government to do everything it takes, as quickly as possible to clean the air in schools. We’ve observed the cool and clean air at Queen’s Park. We’re asking the provincial government to provide the same for schools — with some of that $22 billion of our tax dollars they didn’t spend this year.
We need our leaders to step up and prioritize indoor air quality. Our kids can’t wait.
Heather Hanwell, Ontario School Safety
Share Your Views
Send letters to the editor to letters@windsorstar.com. (Don’t send them as attachments; put them in the body of the emails). Letters must include your full name, address and phone number. (We will only publish your name and the municipality where you live). Letters must be fewer than 300 words. The Star reserves the right to edit, condense and reject letters.
[ad_2]
Source link