|
Northside Elementary School is scheduled to welcome students Aug, 26. (File photo by Megan Parsons, 2019) |
This story has been updated.
By Aaron Gershon
University of Kentucky School of Journalism and Media
The Midway City Council and Mayor Grayson Vandegrift spent
much of their meeting Monday sharing their thoughts on re-opening schools amid
the covid-19 pandemic.
The council also approved a short-term contract for an
economic developer, passed an ordinance easing paperwork rules for volunteer
work on city property, made one block of Johnson Street one-way, and heard that
Vandegrift bought a used ladder truck for the fire department.
The Woodford County Board of Education is planning to resume classes Aug. 26 with a dual option, in which parents can send children to
school or have them do virtual learning, online at home. The board will have a
special meeting Tuesday, Aug. 11.
“We want kids to go back to school at some point,”
Vandegrift said. “My main concern, though, is if you go back in and we’re not
ready to control the spread, if there are four to five kids a week testing
positive for coronavirus and we can’t truly test for it the spread is going to
continue.”
Vandegrift’s estimate was based on
research that uses county
infection rates to estimate the number of infected people likely to arrive at a
school of 500 in the first week.
The mayor called for delaying the in-person start date,
saying said more testing is needed first, to allow tracing the contacts of
infected people and asking them to quarantine.
“I think the board should
seriously consider delaying an open that allows students to enter the school
until we can guarantee more testing,” he said. “I’m not putting that on
Woodford County; the health department has done an unbelievable job, but
everywhere this thing spreads, you can’t tell where it’s coming or going, and
that’s because of testing.”
Council Member Sara Hicks raised concerns about parents who
have health risks but face losing their jobs if their children do not go back
to school: “If you say you can your kids or not send your kids, it sounds like
that’s just a free decision, but I don’t think that’s really a free decision
for people who don’t have the financial wherewithal to put their jobs in
jeopardy.”
Council Member Stacy Thurman didn't opine about opening but
said the school board should get support no matter what decision it makes: “We
need unity, we need a united front and we need solidarity with the board and
the county.”
“There’s no good solution,” said Thurman, mother of a fourth
grader and an eighth grader. “Both solutions are bad and inconvenient and hard.”
Council Member Logan Nance agreed, saying “The bigger risk
than covid to our community is the divisiveness and the language we’re using to
talk to one another.” He also didn’t give the school board any advice, and no
other council members spoke on the topic.
The City Council usually does not involve itself in school
matters, “but this is an unprecedented situation,” Vandegrift said, and the
final call will be “the most important decision that board has made in a long
time, if not ever.”
The mayor said at the start of the discussion, “We don’t in
any way ever want to step on another board or jurisdiction’s toes,” adding
later, “I think it well help them to have an idea how our city, our
constituency, our end of the county feels about this.” At the end of the
discussion, he said Midway-area school-board member Ambrose Wilson posted his
thanks on the Facebook page that carried the meeting.
Other business: The council unanimously approved a six-month contract with Fortune Solutions LLC and point person Lucas Whitt to staff the Woodford County Economic Development Authority for six months, filling the role played by retired EDA chair John Soper.
Whitt worked with Midway on the location of Lakeshore Learning Materials when he worked with the state Economic Development Cabinet, Vandegrift said: "He's well aware of what is going on in Midway Station." The city will pay him $1,050 a month; Soper was paid $1,333.
Most of the pay will come from Versailles and the county government; Vandegrift said he, Mayor Brian Traugott and Judge-Executive James Kay agreed on the temporary hire to give them time to develop “a more concrete, more comprehensive” request for proposals from potential long-term hires.
The council defeated, with lack of a motion, Council Member John Holloway's proposal to rename and replace “Sparks in the Park,” normally held on July 3 or 4, with a celebration on June 19 to honor Juneteenth, a now official city holiday, to honor the end of slavery.
Vandegrift said he had discussed with Holloway “what could be done,” and asked for a motion, but none came. He said Sparks in the Park would continue but “We are going to have a Juneteenth celebration next year on June 19, which happens to fall on a Saturday.”
Interviews after the meeting, via email, indicated that the
opposition stemmed from the idea of doing away with Sparks in the Park.
"I'm really excited to work with members of the black
community here in Midway to honor and celebrate Juneteenth as they see fit. I
also didn't want to do away with Sparks in the Park," Nance said.
"It's a fun event for families and members of the community to come
together and socialize and celebrate Independence Day. I know John's heart was
in the right place when he wrote the resolution, but instead of repurposing
Sparks in the Park I would rather keep that tradition and create a new, special
tradition to honor Juneteenth."
Thurman said, "I appreciate the thought process behind
this resolution and feel that Midway should definitely commemorate Juneteenth
next year. I didn't make a motion to accept this resolution simply because I
think both of these events provide great opportunities to bring our community
together and I don't think we have to substitute one for the other."
Hicks said, “I believe Sparks is a loved tradition that
should not be eliminated. I am also happy to add another celebration of
Juneteenth. There are many reasons to celebrate in Midway.”
Holloway said, "Maybe I'm a purist, but it seems like a
Fourth of July celebration should be on the Fourth of July. Juneteenth is 15
days before Sparks in the Park, and it seems strange to have two events that
close together. I was afraid that even
if we actually have a Juneteenth celebration (which frankly seems unlikely),
the tendency would be for it to become a lesser stepchild – which to me smacks
of separate but equal, and I'm totally opposed to that, as we all should
be."
The council also:
● Heard the mayor announce the purchase of a used ladder truck from Stewart County, Tennessee, for $13,500, using state fire aid money and a city appropriation that was going to be used for an antenna but is no longer needed. Vandegrift said the city needs a ladder truck more than ever, with major facilities in Midway Station. He said Stewart County bought the truck used from Beverly Hills, Calif., but “The truck’s in great condition” and has been driven less than 50,000 miles.
● Unanimously
approved an ordinance simplifying volunteer work on city property. Volunteers will no
longer be required to sign in and out each time, and won't be required to be
under city supervision at all times, since they would sign a waiver of
liability. The change confirms current practice.
● Unanimously
made the 200 block of Johnson Street a one-way street, from Gratz Street to
Brand Street, effective Sept. 1. Nance said he interviewed all but one resident
of the block, and all but one were in favor of the change.
● Heard
Vandegrift report that more than 700 people watched Wednesday’s online forum
about traffic issues, and almost 80 made comments. One suggested traffic
cameras to catch and ticket speeders, but the mayor said he had learned such
cameras are illegal in Kentucky.
Before the moment of reflection at the start of the meeting,
Vandegrift asked members and the online audience to remember the late Joyce
Logan and the late Pat Wilson and their families.