School Counselor At Kentucky Army Post Dies Of Coronavirus
School Counselor At Kentucky Army Post Dies Of Coronavirus
A school counselor at a central Kentucky Army post that started inperson classes in August died this week after being diagnosed with the coronavirus, officials said.

FORT KNOX, Ky.: A school counselor at a central Kentucky Army post that started in-person classes in August died this week after being diagnosed with the coronavirus, officials said.

Fort Knox Middle-High School counselor Pamela Harris was diagnosed with the virus and was being treated at a local hospital when she died Tuesday, said Will Griffin, spokesman for the Department of Defense Education Activity.

The school said on social media that the Army veteran had served as a Defense Department educator in the southeast district for several years.

Her kindness, energy, and love for her job, was seen daily as she greeted students, and co-workers, with a smile and an encouraging word. The joy she possessed in her heart spilled over on to everyone in the building and in the surrounding community, the post said.

The Federal Education Association, which represents educators and support professionals at schools on military bases, said in a statement that it had repeatedly warned management about the dangers of opening schools for in-person learning and advocated for online lessons.

Fort Knox switched to remote learning in early September, but only after Ms. Harris and several other school employees reported COVID symptoms, the statement said.

Ms. Harris death was completely avoidable, had DoDEA exercised proper precautions, said Diane Gibbs, director of the Federal Education Association.

The school is scheduled to resume in-person classes on Sept. 21, the education association said.

Griffin said the Department of Defense Education Activity continues its efforts to safely return to learning in an environment that best supports student achievement.

DoDEA school operations impact the readiness of our military to complete their mission. And we must continue to meet our mission and support readiness by providing military-connected students with a quality education, he said.

The health and safety of our students and employees is always our primary focus. We will continue to partner with our installation commands, parents and students to provide our children with quality education in the safest and most effective manner possible.”

Gibbs, with the Federal Education Association, said the safest way to educate in the pandemic is online.

To prevent any other deaths of staff members or students, DoDEA Director Tom Brady should immediately implement remote operation at all DoDEA schools,” Gibbs said. Cases have been springing up elsewhere throughout DoDEA. It is only a matter of time before another preventable and unnecessary death occurs.”

___

Follow AP coverage of the virus outbreak at https://apnews.com/VirusOutbreak and https://apnews.com/UnderstandingtheOutbreak

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

What's your reaction?

Comments

https://kapitoshka.info/assets/images/user-avatar-s.jpg

0 comment

Write the first comment for this!