I have to question if now, this current moment, is the time to be asking this. If you
look at the current state of covid today, more than half our country has medium covid
community level, which is a level that combines transmission and hospitalization. That
tells me that covid is spreading and causing people to go to hospitals at a significant
amount.
Covid is still a community disease and less an individual one. Thus, it is really best
treated at the community level, where we as organizers should provide the safest possible
condition we can have to dance.
Now, I needed to take public transportation in the DC area yesterday, and I would not say
that it is "mostly maskless" - maybe around 50% masked, maybe fewer? Still, i
am definitely seeing more masks in public places than before the holidays. I also saw a
meeting going on at my office where most in the room were wearing masks.
And also consider that even if crowded, most of society is not like contra, where you are
breathing directly into everyone's faces and having them breathe directly into yours.
Thus if there is any place where universal masking is best, it's contra.
So, knowing that last year we had a huge spike in covid in January after the holiday
gatherings, and that we are seeing a significant uptick now, my advice is to stay the
course on requiring masks until the spring and reassess then. That's learning from
experience.
I empathize with those who don't want to wear a mask to dances, as I personally find
it somewhat exhausting. But I would rather not be responsible for spread of covid that
could potentially harm someone else, so I feel we need to stay the course and continue
requiring masks.
Perry
Sent from Yahoo Mail on Android
On Tue, Jan 3, 2023 at 6:21 PM, Joe Harrington via
Organizers<organizers(a)lists.sharedweight.net> wrote: While I'm happy to comply
with any COVID policy in order to dance, and I choose to wear a mask at bigger events, I
question whether the contra communities' strict policies are doing us much good,
either in protecting us medically or in getting dances going again. Consider:
1. Even in the most restricted states (New England, etc.), nearly everyone is maskless
nearly all the time in normal life, including most dancers. People eat in very crowded
restaurants, ride public transportation, fly on airplanes, sit in airports, go shopping,
work, attend school, do sports, go to the gym, sing, interact with friends and family
members who have been out in the community maskless, etc., mostly without masks.
2. As a result of #1, covid is spreading quite effectively in our communities, even if a
few groups are still masking.
3. As a result of #2, protocols at a dance cannot much alter community spread rates, even
if the dance spread rate were zero.
But, this isn't concerning most people because:
4. Vaccines do keep nearly every infected person out of the hospital and reduce long
covid.
5. For those going to the hospital or suspected to be at risk, monoclonal and other
treatments are quite effective.
6. As a result, the mortality of covid-19 is now down to three times that of a bad flu
season, which is way down from the mass carnage of 2020.
It is questionable what anything but masking is doing for us:
7. Unmasked contra dancing, even with a vaccine and negative test, does lead to rapid
covid spread. Several camps in summer 2022 had 50+ infected dancers, even though they were
all vaccinated and all had tested negative on arrival. The incubation period and
false-negative rate are enough to allow one or two cases through, and the vaccine no
longer keeps you from getting it, it just dramatically reduces severity.
Since:
8. Even in the most conservative, vaccine-averse Southern communities, 90+% of contra
dancers at big events say they are vaccinated (per survey at Summer Contradancers Delight
Holiday in Tennessee).
9. Choosing to wear a mask remains an option for everyone, and is quite effective at
keeping the wearer healthy, though it is not foolproof (but neither is life).
And:
10. People have options for recreational and social activities, and many are choosing
those with fewer or no restrictions, especially young people who don't have much
personal risk from covid.
11. Essentially all other organized dance communities besides contra/English/etc. are
dancing without restrictions on a national level, and have been since early 2022: Square,
swing, blues, ballroom, salsa, tango, etc.
It may therefore be time for communities to reconsider absolute restrictions, and instead
encourage vaccination and mask-wearing as effective ways to stop the spread of diseases
like covid, but also the flu, RSV, and other pathogens.
People can still (and I do) choose to wear masks if they are concerned about getting
covid. The idea of reducing spread at dances would be a good one if the rest of society
were playing along. But, it isn't. When I was a teen, I boycotted China. China
didn't change.
Communities with a large component of at-risk dancers who mask in general life and who are
vaccinated may wish to continue requiring vax+mask. In areas with many dancers, two
dances, one requiring masks and one mask-optional, may make the most sense.
I am especially concerned at the reduced percentage of younger dancers I have seen at
recent events. While it seemed, prepandemic, that there was a nascent resurgence in the
popularity of contra among the current twentysomethings, few of the young dancers I used
to see are showing up to dances post-covid. When I go to swing and blues, there are lots
of younger dancers. I am certain that if we required masks at my college contra dance,
students would just go to ballroom, salsa, or swing.
If we want to get contra going again, and especially if we want to attract many new
younger dancers, who are not worried that getting covid represents a big risk to them and
who have plenty of unrestricted options in recreational activities, perhaps it's time
not to ask, "does this policy stop covid from transmitting at our dance," but
rather, "does this policy significantly lower the total covid risk our dancers
face?"
I argue that strict policies no longer do that, given our behavior in society.
Nonetheless, those of us who are concerned can still choose to reduce our own risk
substantially by being vaccinated and wearing a well-fitting KN95 or better mask whenever
we are in a crowd, including at dances, without requiring it of others. I do.
Thanks,
--jh--
Joe Harrington
Organizer, Greater Orlando Contra Dance
Faculty Advisor, Contra Knights, the UCF contra dancing club
contraknights.org
FB, Ig: Contra Knights
contradancerjoe(a)gmail.com
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