Sending your eight year old to school where even one immunocompromised child (never mind teachers, janitors, grandparents, bus drivers, etc) may die in continuation of a presently untenable status quo is not an acceptable public health risk.
Not to you personally - but this is a good example of a statement with unfounded certainty - "if one child dies, it's unacceptable". It's difficult yes - but is it
unacceptable? You can't reduce risk to zero - so what's the threshold? 1 in 10k? 1 in 100k?
I mean I'm looking at statistics for CA right now because it came up first in my search. Out of 48,500** cases in the 17 and younger age group, there is
one death*. This means it's outright dishonest to say "think of the children.***" The data just doesn't support that conclusion - so at least be honest and say it's about the adult staff and family.
I can appreciate the argument that it's more about the staff and family - the mortality is much higher as age increases, so if kids do "bring it home" then is a more broad secondary impact. Isn't there a way to both have school and protect the more at-risk groups? If not, then so be it, but I just find that sad that we can't "make that work."
*I refuse to comment on any potential "long term" health complications. I just can't (as an engineer) accept the claims that "the disease has severe long-term effects" when we have only seen effects for 8 months; I don't have enough data or understanding to let such things affect my short-term (1-5 years) decisions. I do believe that there are real instances of severe complications - but are they enough to sway my views on risk? Not yet.
**Yes, yes, "so far".
*** There are a total of 60M people in the US aged 14 or younger. This would suggest 1255 total deaths in that age group if every single one of them caught the disease. I actually am confused by my local school board on this one; they claimed that in our elementary school of 600 students the data shows that we would expect 13 student deaths and 2 staff deaths. This is goofy; my state's official numbers are that there are 0 (yes zero!) confirmed or probable deaths in the 0-19 year age bracket. The staff may be correct though; I don't know the staff demographics or count.