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Opinion

The Importance of Mental Health

The importance of mental health is everything and different for everyone.  Mental health can be a touchy subject because people have many different views. Some don’t believe in it and would  advise people to suck it up and it’ll get better eventually while others encourage you to talk about it. 

Mental health is one of the most important things people deal with on a daily basis. The truth is it won’t get better unless one can do something to help themselves. Without stable mental health one cannot  reach their full potential. 

People  may lose all motivation for things they would usually love to do. 

Sometimes one doesn’t want to do simple things like get out of bed, take showers, eat, or go outside because it’s the little things that keep us sane. It may be difficult but once the task is done, it always feels better and there is only ourselves left to thank for it.  taking  it one day at a time, and trusting ourselves will help. No matter what, self care should be a priority . A pause would be nice, but it doesn’t always happen that way because life won’t stop for anyone. Don’tdwell on things that happen. There will always be bumps in the road, learn different ways to cope and keep going. 

Someone’s mental health not only affects them but  everyone around them.  It’s better to not suppress feelings because it leaves them there for another time when something will set them off and  come out all at once.   Good mental health is necessary to create relationships with others and be ready for what life throws at us. One must take care of themselves, because at the end of the day they are left with nobody else but themselves. 

Everyone goes through something at one point, or another. Sometimes it takes  losing oneself to find oneself.  Surrounding oneself with people who are going to make them feel better is key. Being in an environment that isn’t necessarily healthy may be another problem because it may feel inescapable which can be exhausting mentally and physically. . Exercising, coloring, going outside, hanging out with friends are great ways to help distract oneself from troubling times. ne may think its dumb and these things don’t work, but from experience I can say they do.  Walking outside can reduce your stress, improve sleep, increase your energy levels and many other benefits. It is important to figure out what works because we are all different, and all cope in different ways. 

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Opinion

Your Freshman Experience

Freshman year was the pinnacle of my fright. I only knew a couple people when I first came to McClatchy, neither of whom I had classes with. My best option was to stay quiet and speak when I was spoken to, the same way I experienced middle school as most of my conversation starters would be shot down. 

My only knowledge of high school was what I’d seen in movies and what my older sister had told me. As I walked into my first class, I relied on my height (I was five foot at the time) to hide me, which proved ineffective as I made my first friend. 

She was probably one of the nicest people I knew, and I would like to think we’re still friends, even though we have no classes together this year and rarely see each other in the hallways. She introduced me to my first friend group, granted it was a small one. There were four of us, all freshmen, who had a variety of personalities, that I honestly felt made our group unique. We had our inside jokes and played games with each other everyday. It felt like I had the  group of friends I was always missing and finally enjoyed myself. 

I grew to become more comfortable with the people  I knew, and began to make more friends in my classes. My freshman year is the one I probably made the most friends in. Many of the people I met when I was 14 are the people I know and hang out with now. I started to meet more people and, at one point, I knew everyone in my fourth period class. I started to talk to people more, hanging out with different people throughout the day, while still eating lunch with the friend group I had first made. 

While the homework load surprised me, seeing as how I had less homework than my teachers said I would, I still made an effort to get my homework done, probably to an unhealthy amount. As I grew, I started to realize I had to put myself first and focus on me and my mental health first, even at the stake of a grade. I began to make time for me and focus on the little things that made me happy. Obviously I didn’t realize this until later my Junior year, but it’s always good to share with others. 

Right around mid-to-late March is when Covid-19 hit. At first, many of us believed that we’d be out of school for a week at the most, maybe two. Then it started to last longer, going from a couple weeks to a couple months, leaving the next school year online. Not being able to see my friends severely damaged my mental health, and many others, along with it affecting my ability to learn, resulting in my grades getting worse. I only had one teacher who made an active effort to have class online. One teacher, who no longer works at McClatchy, gave up entirely and refused to post any assignments or talk to students, which was hard for a language class. Once the school year was officially over, many of us were confused on what would come next, hoping to be back in school the next year, which obviously didn’t happen. 

Categories
Opinion

Should the Death Penalty Be Put To An End?

This topic has been debated for a while, one side claiming it is inhumane, another saying it’s necessary, and a third saying it depends on the crime and the circumstances. 

Some pros of the death penalty is that It gives many families closure that the person who committed these crimes won’t have a chance to get out of prison. The idea of “an eye for an eye” applies here too. It gives the family an idea of some sort of retribution for their lost loved one or who ever was affected by this person. 

This also prevents some people from commiting more crime, as seen by amnesty international where the rate of death sentences has gone down. With this as a possible punishment, instead of just a few years in jail/prison or possibility of parole, it may allow people to rethink their actions. It also helps prevent overcrowding in the system, leaving more room for more inmates instead of giving them a chance to get out of holding due to overcrowding, resulting in, usually, more crime being committed. 

By continuing the death penalty, it keeps the general public safer than it would be if any of these people escaped or would spend the rest of their lives in jail. The danger of someone with tendencies to commit again being released is too great and should be taken into account no matter what. 

In the case of Albert Flick, he was deemed too old to kill again after being jailed for assaulting two women in 2010 and previously being jailed for killing his wife in 1979. Once released in 2014, he allegedly followed 48 year old Kimberly Dobbie around town, later killing her in 2018 in front of her sons, who were both 11 at the time. If Flick had been kept in jail, or even had the death penalty placed on him, Kimberly would probably still be alive today. 

A con is that it’s irreversible. If a mistake was made, and this person was later found to be innocent, you could never get them back. On top of that, it can be seen as cruel and unusual punishment. There are fewer rich people on death row because they could afford a good lawyer to help them get out of it, while others are stuck with public defendants who aren’t quite sure how to defend their client. 

Also, a country that respects life should not be taking it away. Many police chiefs, when asked, said that the best way to deter crime is curbing drugs and longer sentencing, and they say the death penalty does little to nothing to deter violent crimes. 

The cost to prosecute the death penalty is much higher than other cases. Most of the time, people just don’t care and work outside of the morality and basic safety of society, continuing to risk the lives of others. The current justice system isn’t fair  because there are wrongful convictions and legal disadvantages when it comes down to convictions, leaving those without money having to fend for themselves. 

The death penalty should be abolished. There should be special holding facilities for people who commit violent crimes and the conditions of each person’s holding time should be determined by the crime. The idea of “an eye for an eye” would leave the whole world blind. 

Everyone should be given the same or similar rights to a lawyer, but depending on the offense, there should be a limit or a certain amount of fairness when it comes to defendants. 

The chance of a break out is very slim, a 3% chance to escape, and most of the time, these occur in minimum security prisons, meaning that the chance of someone breaking out of a maximum security prison even slimmer, giving more security to the idea they won’t have a chance to escape.

There are reasons for both sides of the penalty, seeing how this is widely discussed topic. You have to look at both sides of the story to decide. 

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Digital Editions The Prospector

2022 Digital Fall Edition

https://drive.google.com/file/d/1poOa0Cy3fV4ZcvkqVRF_euQiZOiENWEa/view

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Archive News

SCUSD Teachers and Staff Strike

Brian Laird, a West Campus teacher, holds up signs during the strike. Photo credit: Brandon Chan

By Eleanor Love, News and Sports Editor and Izzie Kim, Editor-in-Chief

On Wednesday, March 23, Sacramento City Unified School District (SCUSD) teachers and staff officially took to the picket line. Many wore red and hoisted posters and signs as they marched up and down the street in front of their schools. 

Later that morning, they relocated to gather outside of the Serna Center. Hundreds of teachers and staff walked along the street, and others collected in the parking lot. Students, families, and community members showed up as well. Passing cars honked in support while strikers played music, shook cow bells, and chanted.

The strike was a culmination of disagreements between the Sacramento City Teachers Association (SCTA) and SCUSD. Teachers and staff say they’re angry over a staffing crisis and the district’s proposed changes to their contract (which include benefit cuts, wage cuts, and wage freezes). The Service Employees International Union (SEIU), which represents all non-teacher staff, went on strike with the SCTA.

“There is no reason that the strike needed to happen. The district had days to come to the table to work with us and the SEIU to resolve these problems,” said Nikki Milevsky, Vice President of the SCTA. 

Teachers hold “Staff Our Schools” signs at the strike. Photo credit: Eleanor Love

On March 17, an independent fact finder’s report was released as a result of a fact finding process requested by the district in December 2021. The process sought to help resolve issues between the two parties. The fact finder’s recommendations largely supported the SCTA’s stances, and the SCTA quickly concurred with the recommendations. The district did not concur, and after negotiations on Monday and Tuesday, no agreement was met. 

“We assumed they would concur with the report they asked to have happen, and they did not. They dissented and refused to accept their fact finder’s report,” Milevsky explained.

Milevsky and other union leadership also highlighted that 10,000 students in the district have had an uncertified instructor leading their classes for at least part of the 2021-2022 school year. SCUSD’s official website reports that over 40,000 students attend SCUSD schools – if both of these numbers are accurate, about a quarter of students have experienced this. 

In an interview conducted by local news station ABC10, SCUSD Superintendent Jorge Aguilar explained “This is certainly not something that’s ideal for our community and I recognize it and I just hope that we can bring back our students.”

The Prospector also requested comment from SCUSD officials at the Serna Center, but none were available at the site.

Standing on a makeshift stage in the parking lot of the Serna Center, surrounded by union leadership as well as students, SCTA President David Fisher rallied the crowd: “We didn’t choose this fight. But we’re gonna finish it,” he said.

Many chants from the crowd centered around Aguilar’s recent pay raises: a 34,000-dollar raise in March 2020 and an increase in benefits in December 2021.

“He should be taking a pay cut, not you,” said Fisher.

Teachers and staff march outside of the Serna Center. Photo credit: Eleanor Love

On Tuesday, March 22, the United Professional Educators (UPE), which represents school administrators, issued a pages-long letter to Aguilar and Board of Education members. “We have lost confidence in the District’s ability to provide effective leadership,” it reads. 

UPE’s indication of no confidence is in addition to SCTA and SEIU’s votes of no confidence.

Members from the National Education Association (NEA) and California Teachers Association (CTA) also offered support to teachers and staff. 

NEA Vice President Princess Moss joined the stage today, asserting that “Teachers and educators must unite because public education is a human right. When public education is under attack, we must stand up and fight back.” 

“What the union is asking for really isn’t extraordinary. The district has these funds from the American Rescue Plan and the governor,” Moss said. 

Teachers and staff plan to continue their strike. Wednesday evening, C.K. McClatchy Principal Andrea Egan sent out an email to parents and students stating that schools will be closed again on Thursday and for the duration of the strike. Meals will be available for pickup at the school from 11 a.m. to 1:30 p.m.

Tomorrow, after striking at their respective schools from 8 to 10 a.m., teachers and staff intend to gather outside of the Sacramento County Office of Education. On Friday, they plan to march in front of Sacramento City Hall and Cesar Chavez Plaza.

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Archive News

SCTA Hosts Rally Outside School Board Meeting with Official Strike Day Approaching

Teachers and staff hold posters and march outside of the district board meeting at the Serna Center. Photo Credit: Brandon Chan

By Brandon Chan, Staff Writer

On Thursday March 17, the Sacramento City Teachers Association (SCTA) and Service Employees International Union (SEIU) hosted a rally outside of SCUSD’s school board meeting at the Serna Center. Hundreds of teachers and staff, most clad in “Red for Ed” shirts, held posters, chanted, and gathered outside of the Center. Many SCUSD students and families also attended to demonstrate support. 

This rally follows the SCTA and SEIU’s vote last Friday to authorize a strike. Teachers and staff alike say they’re frustrated over an ongoing staffing crisis, the district’s approach to independent study, and the district’s proposed changes to their contract which include wage cuts, benefit changes, and work day hours. 

The rally aimed to raise awareness about this conflict and unite the community. At the event, SCTA President David Fisher confirmed that a teacher’s strike will occur on Wednesday, March 23. 

Credit: Brandon Chan

Teachers, staff, and supporters alike shared the same sentiment: they want the best conditions for students. 

“We’re fighting for students, we’re fighting for their teachers and their classrooms, we’re fighting for buses and their bus drivers, we’re fighting for counselors, we’re fighting for services for the students,” Fisher asserted.

Peter Hart, a special education teacher at Fern Bacon Middle School, also explained his frustration with the district. “How can a student learn when all they get are substitutes, day in day out, when the district cannot retain good teachers? They keep trying to gut and cut programs that are beneficial to the students.” 

Mara Harvey, a mother of two SCUSD students agreed. “We as parents want to see teachers in every single classroom. We want teachers to educate our children.”

The Prospector requested comment at the Serna Center from Superintendent Jorge Aguilar, Board of Education member Lisa Murawski, and Communications Manager Alexander Goldberg. However, none were available. 

Earlier today, SCUSD held a press conference on the State of Labor negotiations. The district acknowledged its struggles with financial balancing and stated that its concern is equally focused on its teachers, staff, and students. In the conference, the district also commended the school board for taking fiscally sound steps in correcting budget imbalances last year.

“We need contracts that provide certainty in the short-term, and the long-term that factor in the need for fair and competitive total compensation for our staff,” SCUSD explained. “We ask that instead of striking, our labor partners go back to the bargaining table. We stand in support of our district community.”

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Archive News

SCTA Votes to Authorize Strike with Rally at Serna Center Approaching

By Brandon Chan, Staff Writer and Eleanor Love, News and Sports Editor

On March 8th, the Sacramento City Teachers Association (SCTA) voted to authorize a strike as a result of the Sacramento City Unified School District’s (SCUSD’s) proposed plan to cut health benefits, staff positions, no defined workday, and other district rights. The SCTA vote was 95 percent in support of the authorization.

The vote took place from March 8 to March 10. The Service Employee International Union (SEIU), which covers all non-educational staff in the district, voted 97 percent in favor of the authorization as well. While this vote does not directly trigger a strike, it allows union leaders to call a strike in the future if they see fit. 

According to the SCTA, the primary motivation for this vote revolves around a staffing crisis in the district. In 2019, SCUSD unveiled a contract proposal that has gone unchanged since. The proposal includes the district’s right to change health insurance benefits at any time, a five year freeze on teacher wages, wage cuts, staff position cuts, and additional teacher meetings without compensation. The proposal also introduces the right to oversee the hiring of new staff without existing staff input and an increase in class size maximums, among other measures. 

Nate Starace, one of C.K. McClatchy’s union representatives, explained that “In a way it ‘de-professionalizes’ teaching. It takes away a lot of autonomy that teachers have. It shows new teachers looking for a place to teach that teachers are not seen as professionals that understand what they’re doing and that they need to be completely managed by the district office.”

The SCTA claims that the proposal would worsen staff shortages and create a deeper staffing crisis in the district. According to the association, the union has communicated this concern to the district in every bargaining session since 2019. When the COVID-19 pandemic began in spring of 2020, the staffing crisis grew even worse. 

“Why would a new teacher come here when they can make more in another school district? The job’s hard enough. It’s not a way to attract new teachers,” added Starace.

Despite receiving federal funding over the duration of the pandemic and reports that the district has more funding now than at any time of its history, teachers and staff say little funding has been directed at addressing staffing shortages. The authorization to strike is a culmination of this conflict. But the district and SCTA are even at odds over where they’re at an impasse. 

The Prospector reached out to C.K. McClatchy’s board of education member Lisa Murawski for comment but received no reply. Additionally, when asked to comment, district communications manager Alexander Goldberg responded with a link to Superintendent Jorge Aguilar’s March 9 press release

In his statement, Aguilar asserted that SCUSD and SCTA were dealing with two separate negotiations: one over school reopening plans related to COVID and the other involving the successor contract negotiations. “The district and SCTA have both acknowledged that we are not at impasse over successor contract negotiations,” the statement reads. 

Aguilar added that “it is unconscionable that SCTA is threatening a strike,” asserting that “it is offensive to all of our families that have been waiting for their children’s school experience to get back to normal.”

SCTA’s stance, however, is that the staffing shortage experienced during the COVID pandemic is not temporary. It believes that the contract proposal would further worsen the situation. The SCTA claims that it never separated these two negotiations issues. 

In response to Aguilar’s message, SCTA stated “The district is now unsuccessfully trying to claim that the issues are limited only to its own, narrowly-focused proposals. The district appears to be arguing that only its proposals should be considered, while ignoring the fact that SCTA has made its own set of proposals to resolve the issues.” 

On March 17, SCTA will hold a rally outside of the Serna Center at 4 p.m., where the next district board meeting will be held. The rally aims to show widespread community support for teachers and staff members.

After the board meeting, the bargaining teams of both unions will meet and discuss future steps. 

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Archive Opinion Technology

Why NFTs Won’t Work

By Tristan Olynick, Staff Writer

Over the past year, NFTs (Non-Fungible Tokens) have come into the view of the mainstream media and have come into controversy. The biggest reason why these internet keys have become controversial is because simply, they do not work. Many people believe that these may change the way we use the internet, yet NFTs are stupid technically and ideally. 

A big problem is that NFTs are artificially inflated. This inflation comes from the practice that a lot of top tier NFT owners use called “wash trading”. This happens when the owner of an NFT will buy his own NFT with a different crypto wallet. These purchases are traceable through viewing a wallet’s history. 

The purpose of wash trading is to artificially drive up the price of these images to an unreasonable number, causing people to think that it’s worth more than it really is. It also puts on the act to potential buyers that it is highly tradeable, causing higher chances for profit returns.

A lot of this wash trading is discovered by places such as “Chainanalysis” which “Connects cryptocurrency transactions to real-world activity.” According to Chainanalysis, there were 25 NFTs discovered under wash trading that made over 8.9 million dollars in ETH (Ethereum) which is an online currency.

A key argument you may have heard thrown around about NFTs changing the game may be in video games, which claim that you can buy an NFT and use it in one game, and then use it in another. A quote from American singer Mike Shinoda, “Imagine taking your favorite skin from Valorant, and using it [in] Fortnite. And not paying extra, because you won it. Then using it in CoD, Minecraft, even Twitter, IG.” This is practically impossible.

On January 9, 3D character artist Xavier Coelho-Kostolny created a thread on twitter explaining why Mike Shinoda’s vision is impractical. When reviewing the thread, one point jumps out clearly. It is irreconcilable to jump from one art style to another; specifically based on rendering technology.

Rendering technology is complicated, there is no same way of rendering things. Many games use vastly different “engines” that drive this rendering for objects, effects, backgrounds, and more in these games. While Valorant renders their game through one engine, Minecraft will render objects in not only a different, but different code. This creates a very important limitation that many seem to overlook. 

Due to this change in code and rendering engines, each and every NFT would need to be converted to every single engine imaginable, including ones made by smaller companies which might not even support this conversion. To render an NFT in Valorant you have to give specific instructions and rules to draw this NFT to one’s monitor. Using that same NFT in another game such as Minecraft would break it entirely because they both use completely different sets of instructions to draw objects.

When you look at the server side of things, it gets even worse. If NFTs were to take full effect there would possibly be millions of them. All of them (to even be identified by the platform you are using such as Instagram) would have to be placed on a centralized hub where the platform can pull information from. The platform then needs to spend multiple CPU cycles to verify it is yours and cannot be duplicated, this would slow down server performance immensely rendering them almost useless.

To actually accomplish Shinoda’s dream, Xavier explains that it would cost an unfathomable amount of money with legal issues, conversion work, having to remodel it to fit with the games art style, and performance cost. It simply isn’t worth the work, and many believe it would completely kill the NFT market.

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Archive Entertainment

The Book of Boba Fett: Weaker than the Sum of its Parts

By Jackson Wedel, Staff Writer

Making a show about Boba Fett would have been a difficult task no matter the circumstances. The Star Wars character became such a fan favorite not because of his deep characterization or interesting connection to the storyline, but because he simply has a cool design. In fact, in the original Star Wars trilogy, Boba has exactly four lines of dialogue: hardly something that could make for an engaging protagonist. 

A show like Disney+’s The Book of Boba Fett, centering on the iconic bounty hunter, had to simultaneously live up to the character’s legendary reputation while also inventing a personality that never existed in the first place.

The series picks up where the second season of The Mandalorian left off: Boba Fett (played by Temuera Morrison), along with his fellow bounty hunter Fennec Shand (Ming-Na Wen), attempts to become the new reigning crime lord on the planet Tatooine. Intermittent flashbacks depict how Boba survived his apparent demise in Star Wars Episode VI: Return of the Jedi, revealing how the hardships he faced forced him to evolve as a human being.

On paper, this sounds like a genuinely compelling concept for a Boba Fett series. Depicting Boba as a burgeoning crime lord allows him to genuinely struggle as a character in a way that portraying him in his element as a talented bounty hunter would never allow for. Moreover, it has the added benefit of distinguishing the show’s premise from that of The Mandalorian, which follows a very similar stoic armored bounty hunter. Meanwhile, the flashbacks not only provide a much-needed follow-up to Boba’s last movie appearance, but also allows him to develop as a character, giving him the necessary emotional range to lead a series.

Moreover, the show does tap into some of this potential. Boba Fett finally feels vaguely like a human being, rather than a glorified action figure, thanks to the powerful character development he undergoes here. Although the present-day storyline is messier, it is still packed with entertaining moments that fully embrace the character’s origins as a “space cowboy” archetype. In particular, I thought it handled fanservice exceptionally well: while characters from other Star Wars shows and even comics appeared, they were usually handled in a manner that contributed to the tone of the series and that could still be appreciated even if you didn’t know their origins.

Unfortunately, the structure of the show leaves something to be desired. While the flashbacks provide a solid narrative connection to Boba’s character development, they are incredibly uneven: some episodes center almost entirely on flashbacks, while others rarely feature them. Meanwhile, the crime lord plotline feels jerky and stilted: there isn’t enough of a central conflict to drive these sequences until the third or fourth episode, and the somewhat disjointed nature of the series leaves every episode feeling disconnected from the others, forcing the series to tie absolutely everything together in its admittedly entertaining finale.

The most egregious instance of the show’s structure actively sabotaging itself comes with its fifth and sixth episodes. These episodes focus on a completely different character, whose journey is not relevant at all to Boba’s storylines. In fact, Boba Fett, the protagonist and titular character of the series, does not appear at all in his show’s fifth episode, and has a very minimal presence in the sixth. To be perfectly fair to these episodes, they are absolutely fantastic pieces of standalone Star Wars media. But as episodes of The Book of Boba Fett, they are frankly incomprehensible. While a “side story” like this might be excusable in a long-running show, Boba Fett only has seven episodes, meaning that almost 30% of the series completely sidelines its protagonist.

Because the show spends so much time on completely unrelated storylines, it feels like the narrative lacks the space it needs to grow and develop. While lots of compelling storylines are introduced and set up, most of them are simply not fleshed-out enough – something that those two “wasted” episodes could have easily been better used for. 

For instance, the series flirts with the idea that in order to fully redeem himself, Boba must face and fully reject his unscrupulous past. However, that concept is primarily established through other characters talking about Boba – he is never actually given the time to reflect on those aspects of himself, turning an otherwise-interesting character beat into an afterthought.

Thankfully, and as expected from Star Wars, the technical elements of the show are all top-notch. Even though individual episodes have far lower budgets than a full movie would, the special effects all feel realistic and well-integrated into the world. The set design, too, is a strong point, perfectly replicating the aesthetic of Tatooine from the original Star Wars movies while simultaneously expanding upon it. 

Finally, the score, written by Mandalorian composer Ludwig Göransson, is phenomenal, once again abandoning Star Wars’ traditionally orchestral soundtrack in favor of the more modern sound that made The Mandalorian stand out as a “new era”.

Ultimately, while The Book of Boba Fett is certainly not a bad show, it could have been so much stronger than what it ended up as. It seems like all the building blocks necessary to make a strong Boba Fett series were in place, but they simply lacked the necessary narrative and thematic ties to bring them all together into one cohesive whole. The show’s end result is a rather messy, but enjoyable jumble of ideas that never seem to build on each other. 

Perhaps it was inevitable that a show centered around such an empty character would likewise be a little messy, but it is nevertheless slightly disappointing that it was so close to being a great series.

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Archive COVID News

SCUSD, McClatchy Assess COVID Cases

By Eleanor Love, News and Sports Editor

The Sacramento City Unified School District (SCUSD) is continuing with in-person instruction despite major student and staff absences as the highly contagious Omicron variant rages across the nation. 

The district’s Reopening Dashboard shows that SCUSD has 322 active COVID cases among students and staff as of Tuesday, January 11 at 8:45 a.m. However, these numbers do not reflect positive tests taken at home, nor do they reflect positive tests taken outside of district testing sites. 

If SCUSD were to shift to online learning, it would be a district-level decision under guidance from the County Office of Education and the state, explained C.K. McClatchy Principal Andrea Egan.

“As you can imagine, most educators are earnestly working to keep school doors open as we recognize the impact school closures had on student mental health and learning loss students suffered due to prolonged closures. It’s unclear if our area will reach the full tipping point that might necessitate temporary closures due to staffing challenges,” Egan said. 

Sacramento County has not yet responded to inquiries by The Prospector about when the county would consider closing schools. The county has passed 200,000 confirmed cases of COVID. About 28,000 of those cases have come in the past two weeks. As of Tuesday, 464 are hospitalized, compared to 267 last week and 165 two weeks ago, said Sacramento Bee reporter Mike McGough. 

According to social studies teacher Lori Jablonski, McClatchy currently has about a 50 to 55 percent attendance rate. Multiple teachers are absent but the school has been fortunate to receive a decent number of substitutes to cover classes. In some cases, teachers are using their prep periods to fill in for missing teachers.

In an effort to combat staffing shortages, California Governor Gavin Newsom signed an executive order on Tuesday that loosens state barriers that delay the hire of qualified short-term substitutes. 

McClatchy’s on-site testing room has been averaging about 400 tests a day. Students are now required to receive a pass from a teacher in order to test. Those who are experiencing symptoms are also required to wait in the pool area until they receive their test result. 

In order to accommodate absent students and teachers, McClatchy has completely adjusted its finals week schedule. Typically, first semester finals take place during the last week of January and consist of three days of two two-hour exams. However, instead of hours-long exams, the school will be using the last week of the semester to focus on mental health and social emotional learning. 

As COVID cases have increased along with student and staff absences, a site level agreement has been made to minimize traditional comprehensive final exams this semester. Our site level concern is students having missed important instruction to prepare for a cumulative final and/or they may be absent during finals week due to illness or quarantine,” Egan said in an update on Tuesday, January 12. 

Some teachers may still choose to give unit tests or modified final tests, but for the most part traditional finals will not be administered.