Amid COVID absences, Wake schools again making it easier for athletes to remain eligible
Update: Wake County school board approved the policy waver on Feb. 1.
The Wake County school system will continue to temporarily waive attendance requirements to allow more high school and middle school students to play interscholastic athletics this semester.
The Wake school board had waived attendance requirements for athletic eligibility in the fall semester because of how so many students had missed time during the pandemic.
School administrators asked to extend the attendance waiver into this spring semester.
“We know that there were and are continuing challenges and obstacles due to the pandemic which might otherwise render some of our students ineligible,” Drew Cook, assistant superintendent for academics, told the school board’s policy committee this week.
“As such, we are requesting that this committee waive the attendance component regarding eligibility for student participation in high schools and middle schools for the spring semester of 2022, which is based on their fall participation.”
The school board approved the waiver request on Feb. 1.
“We are taking the extenuating circumstances around the pandemic into account,” said Christine Kushner, chairwoman of the policy committee, said at the Jan. 25 committee meeting.
Even with the attendance waiver, students must still meet academic requirement to maintain eligibility.
Attendance down during pandemic
Under district policy, Wake County student-athletes had to have been in attendance at least 85% of the time the prior semester to be eligible to participate in the current semester. That works out to being absent no more than 13.5 days during a 90-day semester.
Attendance has dropped during the pandemic from students testing positive for COVID-19 or being quarantined due to exposure to the virus.
Absences are expected to be less of a concern for athletic eligibility next school year because the state Department of Health and Human Services has eased quarantine requirements on schools.
In the past, students exposed to COVID-19 had to quarantine for up to two weeks even if they didn’t test positive.
Now if you’re exposed to the virus but don’t test positive, you can stay in school if you’re vaccinated or stay home for five days or less if you are unvaccinated. Quarantine times for people who test positive have been reduced to five days.
This story was originally published January 27, 2022 at 12:57 PM.