Ontario data 'doesn't tell full story' of COVID-19 situation in classrooms, says school board
Ontario's new system of reporting school absences "doesn't tell the full story" of COVID-19 in the province's classrooms, according to one school board, because the data doesn't provide contextual information.
On Monday, the province debuted a new data set that gives parents daily updates on the number of students and staff absent from the school on any given day -- which replaced the detailed COVID-19 data families relied on between September and December last year.
According to the Toronto District School Board, however, the data omits critical information that could leave parents guessing and the board is looking at how it can further clarify the information.
"The fact is, those numbers do not paint the entire picture, they are about absences from the school," Ryan Bird, a spokesperson for the TDSB, told CTV News Toronto on Tuesday.
"We've had some examples where an absence rate was 55 per cent [and] we follow up with the school to find out [there’s] one known COVID-19 case in the school."
Bird said, in addition to a positive case, students or staff could be absent for a variety of reasons — from taking a vacation to attending appointments, or even observing a religious day — but the data doesn't distinguish the reason behind the absences.
"At the TDSB, we're looking at how we can take some of this information and bring further clarity to it and we're looking how we can present that information to give a little more of an accurate snapshot of the actual absences at an individual school,” he said.
The hazy data also impacts school closures, which the Ministry of Education says will only be reported if COVID-19 creates operational challenges -- a policy that hasn't changed since September.
On Jan. 21, for example, sixteen Ontario schools were closed "due to operational impacts of COVID-19," but three days later, the province reported eleven schools were closed for the same reason.
What the provincial reporting website does not indicate, however, is what changed over the span of a weekend to allow five of those sixteen schools to reopen and why the remainder are still closed to students and staff.
When asked for further information about the closures, a spokesperson for Education Minister Stephen Lecce said "only closures associated with operational reasons due to COVID-19" are reported and that "staff shortages" could result in school closures as well.
The lack of information has led a group of Ottawa parents to create a self-reporting Facebook group that now has more than 8,000 members -- 1,900 of whom joined in the last week.
"With kids going back to school and no tracing in the classrooms or daycares anymore, this is a place to self-report location and dates [of] positive COVID cases so people can make individual risk assessments," the group said in a description.
Ontario Liberal Leader Steven Del Duca slammed the new reporting mechanism which, he claims, creates "chaos" in the education sector.
"I don't know how parents are supposed to decipher the information that came out yesterday," Del Duca said during an unrelated news conference. "I know it's going to cause a great deal of concern [and] anxiety."
"We all hope for the best, but this does nothing to instill confidence."
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
Monkeypox: What is it and how does it spread?
A growing number of countries, including Canada, the U.S., Spain, Portugal, and the U.K, are reporting an unusual outbreak of monkeypox. Here is what we know about this rare virus.

Canada inflation: How we compare to other G7 nations
With a meeting of G7 finance ministers underway this week, a CTVNews.ca analysis found that while Canadians are feeling the pain of record-high inflation, among G7 nations we are surpassed by Germany, the U.S., and the U.K.
911 dispatcher who took Buffalo shooting call put on leave
A 911 dispatcher has been placed on leave and may lose her job after allegedly hanging up on an supermarket employee hiding during this weekend's shooting rampage in Buffalo, New York.
Service Canada increases staffing at passport counters, but long waits persist
With lengthy delays for Canadians seeking to get a new or renewed passport, Service Canada says it’s upped staffing at passport service counters to expedite processing ahead of the summer travel season. Yet, travellers say they’re still facing long wait times.
Jason Kenney has quit as UCP leader. What happens to the party and government now?
With Jason Kenney having stepped down as leader of Alberta's United Conservative Party, who is now leader of the province?
Conservatives want Canada to revert to pre-pandemic travel rules
The Conservative Party is doubling down on its call for the federal government to do away with travel restrictions and revert back to 'pre-pandemic rules' in light of recent airport delays.
Rosmarie Trapp, whose family inspired 'Sound of Music,' dies
Rosmarie Trapp, whose Austrian family the von Trapps was made famous in the musical and beloved movie 'The Sound of Music,' has died.
OPINION | Don Martin: Premier Jason Kenney deserved a better death
There's a lesson for Canada's political leaders in the short life and quick death of Jason Kenney as premier of Alberta, writes Don Martin in an exclusive opinion column for CTVNews.ca.
NEW | Man charged in Edison Avenue homicide in Winnipeg; police investigating possibility of more victims
The Winnipeg Police Service has changed a 35-year-old man with first-degree murder in connection with the death of a woman whose remains were found near an apartment building in North Kildonan, and police are investigating the possibility of more victims.