The Blanchester board of education voted on Monday to change the district’s mask policy, allowing students not to wear masks during certain activities.
Students can go mask-less while playing outside or on school buses with rolled-down windows for the rest of the current school year, which runs until June 1.
After June 1, no one who walks through the doors of any Blanchester school needs to wear a mask at all.
Blanchester Local Schools, located in Clinton County just west of Warren County, has an enrollment of about 1,700 students, according to the schools' website.
The new policy, adopted by a 4-1 majority, comes after the CDC released new guidance allowing people outdoors not to wear masks if they are vaccinated and socially distanced outdoors.
More:Will DeWine make changes to Ohio's COVID-19 mask mandate with new CDC guidance?
Currently, none of the vaccines are approved for children under 16, though reports suggest Pfizer will be approved for teens 12 and older next week.
“I’ve continuously had concerned parents blow my phone up asking me, ‘When are we going to rescind this issue? When are we going to change the policy,’” said Kyle Wilson, president of the Blanchester Board of Education.
Wilson says those who voted for the new policy “don’t believe in” the Ohio Department of Health’s mask mandate.
He says the board consulted its attorney about the updated policy and was assured it is legal, though Wilson declined to share the legal specifics.
Andy Hamm is a teacher and parent in the district.
“As a teacher I expect my students to follow rules. I think that’s part of what we teach,” he said. “So it’s disheartening to see that we are going against what professionals have put in place when those are what the professionals are there for.”
Despite that, Hamm says the new policy won’t change how — or what — he teaches.
“About all I can do is continue to walk in and continue to teach students to do what is right and to follow guidelines, to listen to professionals, and I know my fellow teachers are going to do the same,” he said.
The board says it may revisit the issue before the next school year.
Enquirer media partner Fox19 provided this report
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