ALHAMBRA (CNS) - As fear about novel coronavirus spreads -- much faster than the disease itself -- nearly 14,000 people have signed an online petition, urging Alhambra Unified to cancel all classes until the outbreak ends, it was reported today.
Officials say the movement is just part of a hysteria sweeping across the San Gabriel Valley, especially among the large Asian community, one full of conjecture and rumors, the San Gabriel Valley Tribune reported.
“The virus has already made a name for itself by killing many individuals in China as well as spreading to other countries at a rapid pace,” the Change.com petition reads. “There have been cases in Orange County and there is a suspicion of a case of this virus in Alhambra.”
But Toby Gilbert, a spokeswoman for the district, said there are no plans to cancel classes. She also dispelled a student-spread rumor that the district bans face masks. It doesn't, but it also does not recommend wearing them because mask are not effective in preventing sicknesses, according to the Tribune.
“We believe that petition and those that are signing it are basing their information on false rumors and are scaring themselves by not getting fact-based, science-based information,” she told the Tribube in a phone interview on Monday.
Without a declaration of an emergency, Superintendent Denise Jaramillo does not have the authority to close the schools because students must attend 180 days of instruction each academic year, Gilbert added. Neither the state, the Los Angeles County Office of Education or the county Department of Health have declared an emergency.
Only two cases of novel coronavirus have been confirmed in Southern California, one in Los Angeles County and the other in Orange County. Those came on Jan. 26, and while there since have been three new confirmed cases in Northern California, there are no new confirmed cases in the Southland.
The county Department of Health recently said: “In L.A. County, as in counties across the U.S., the threat to the general public for contracting novel coronavirus remains low.”
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