Baltimore, MD - Sept. 7, 2020: Corona minute: Where we stand, how to go forward.

I haven’t written in a while.

Many people have asked for me to chime in again.

I was hoping that by now there would be nothing to write about and that life would again be normal. Sadly, this is not so. Our community has done extremely well in limiting the disease and protecting the most vulnerable among us. There have been clusters of Covid, mostly related to weddings and other super spreader events.

The number of cases has increased over the past several weeks but is still controlled. We need to move forward but with due caution. Besides protecting the high-risk population, which has been one factor in lessening mortality, we also have a high-risk situation where we must protect-our schools. If we let our guard down, relax restrictions, and act as if this whole ordeal is over (it is definitely not), we will likely be confronted with the need (by government order) to shut the schools. This has to be avoided.

Schools are the linchpin. If they shutdown, all our efforts to open up the economy will be stymied and our collective and individual mental health, which have many people on the ropes, will get a crushing blow. Children need school, and their parents need a breather and need to work.

Our best shot at making this all work is to continue the despised but necessary masking and social distancing. Avoiding super spreader events is also advisable. The safe bubble concept is no longer viable- this bubble along with many others have burst (like the promise of Hydroxychloroquine) along the way.

Therefore, we need to choose our social interactions with more deliberation and care and take the requirements of isolation and quarantine seriously. Keeping the cases manageable is the way forward. A shout out is in order for our schools, including teachers and administrators, who have undertaken this herculean task of opening the schools.

We all want this, need this is a better term, and we must support them in every way.

Wishing everyone good health and safety and a K’siva V’chasima Tova.