Like Souderton, the district recently made masking optional. She wishes masking were enforced.
Still, she wants her son there in person.
“It’s much healthier for him mentally,” Simeon said.
And omicron, though more transmissible, appears to be milder in children than previous variants.
“That helps me a lot,” Simeon said, “knowing that since he’s vaccinated, he should be OK either way.”
The calculus looks different for Larissa Hopwood, whose child has Type 1 diabetes and is at higher risk of becoming seriously ill from the virus.
“They’re really putting parents who have at-risk kids between a rock and a hard place,” she said of the Central Bucks School District.
Hopwood ended up keeping her kid home from school for the two weeks before winter break. At first, it was a spur-of-the-moment decision.
“It was actually Monday morning [Dec. 13], where I woke Rowan up and was going to get him ready for school and just realized how dangerous that was,” she said.
She wanted to get him a heavier-duty mask. Then, as cases continued to rise, she didn’t feel comfortable sending him back.
Now, she’s taking it day by day as she figures out what to do in the new year.
“This feels like those chickenpox parties that people used to have in the ’80s,” Hopwood said.
“You know, ‘Let’s just expose our kids to chickenpox, and then we’ll all just get it over with.’ But it’s on a big scale, and we’re not being invited, we’re being forced into this.”
Like many, Stephanie Barnett, the Souderton parent, hopes any spike in omicron-driven cases is short term, and “then maybe, within a few weeks, we can return to somewhat pre-omicron. But nobody knows, and I think the uncertainty is the hardest part for everyone.”