CDC Director: Closing Schools an 'Emotional Response' - 'Safest Places' Kids Can Be
Dr. Robert Redfield says calls to close schools are not backed by data

The director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), Dr. Robert Redfield, has slammed calls to close schools, insisting they are the "safest places" kids can be.
Dr. Redfield said on Thursday that K-12 schools should remain open amid the pandemic, arguing that attempts to close schools are nothing more than an “emotional response.”
He said the response to close schools is not backed by data.
“Today, there’s extensive data that we have—we’ve gathered over the last two to three months—that confirm that K-12 schools can operate with face-to-face learning and they can do it safely and they can do it responsibly,” Redfield said.
“The infections that we’ve identified in schools when they’ve been evaluated were not acquired in schools," he explained.
"They were actually acquired in the community and in the household.”

"Today, as Dr. Birx said, our big threat for transmission is not the public square, it’s small family gatherings, family gatherings where people become more comfortable, they remove their face-mask when they get together and it’s this silent epidemic that begins to transmit,” Redfield continued.
"But it’s not interschool transmission.
"The truth is, for kids K-12, one of the safest places they can be, from our perspective, is to remain in school, and it’s really important that following the data, making sure we don’t make emotional decisions about what to close and what not to close, and I’m here to say clearly the data strongly supports that K-12 schools—as well as institutes of higher learning—really are not where we’re having our challenges.”
"And it would be counterproductive from my point of view, from a public health point of view, just in containing the epidemic, if there was an emotional response, to say, ‘Let’s close the schools’,” he added.
WATCH:
CDC Director Robert Redfield pointing out the obvious that triggers teachers unions, which is "[t]ere is extensive data" that "confirm[s]...K-12 schools can operate with face-to-face learning and they can do it safely and they can do it responsibly." pic.twitter.com/o4nMS81Axp
— Curtis Houck (@CurtisHouck) November 19, 2020
Redfield said over the summer that the threat of suicide, drugs, and the seasonal flu represented a “far greater threat” to children than COVID-19.
“We’re seeing, sadly, far greater suicides now than we are deaths from COVID,” Redfield said at the time.
“We’re seeing far greater deaths from drug overdose that are above excess that we had as background than we are seeing the deaths from COVID.”

“So this is why I keep coming back, for the overall social being of individuals, is let’s all work together and find out how we can find common ground to get these schools open in a way that people are comfortable and their safe,” he continued.
"And if there is a need for investment and resources, just like there is a need for some of the underprivileged children that are probably better served if they have certain comorbidities to do homeschooling, they need the access to be able to have the computer and the internet to do that.”
"The goal is to get all these kids back into education,” Redfield concluded.
"I’d like to see the goal being face-to-face education, five days a week, as when we get there, then we’ve got there for those children that don’t have an underlying significant comorbidity that would preclude it.
"And, hopefully, the states and the federal government will work together to see that the resources to get these schools fully operational come to bear.”