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From YouTube: January ECE Partner Meeting Recording
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A
Concern
Boulder
County,
Public
Health,
child
health
promotion
coordinator,
and
we
will
be
recording
this
meeting
so
if
a
few
miss
it
or
have
to
leave
or
would
like
to
show
it
elsewhere,
I'll
be
sending
out
the
recording
and
the
the
PowerPoint
in
the
next
few
days.
So
thank
you.
A
If
this
is
your
first
time
or
maybe
you've
forgotten,
it
seems
like
it's
been
a
little
while,
since
we've
done
this
meeting,
that
format
will
start
with
a
communical
disease
update
from
our
friend
Martha
Hintz
and
then
actually
a
change
to
the
agenda.
We
are
not
doing
the
indoor
quality
grants.
We
already
did
that
from
last
time.
A
So
you
already
have
information
on
that
nothing
new
to
report,
but
we
do
have
some
a
couple
folks
from
our
emergency
management
office
talking
a
little
bit
about
how
to
ensure
that
you're
prepared
for
a
variety
of
emergencies
and
then
our
partners
to
chime
in
and
and
we'll
end
it
with
an
introduction
to
how
we
want
to
use
the
other
two
months
of
each
quarter
with
some
health
promotion.
We're
calling
it
wet
your
appetite.
A
B
Hey
well
hello,
everyone,
I'm,
Martha,
Hansa
and
I'm
the
person
who
who
answers
and
replies
most
of
the
email
correspondence
when
you
write
to
our
health
ECE
at
bouldercounty.org,
inbox
and
I've
worked
at
BC
pH
ads
since
September
and
I've
enjoyed
getting
to
know
you
and
learn
from
your
expertise.
Many
of
you
have
been
ecce
directors
for
over
20
years.
So
it's
been
good
to
get
to
know
you
and
learn
from
you
and
I'm
the
bridge
between
the
ECE
partners
and
the
communicable
disease
department
at
Boulder
County.
B
So
my
goal
is
to
help
prevent
the
spread
of
diseases
which
are
particularly
common
to
child
care
facilities.
So
thank
you
for
your
great
questions.
When
you
reach
out
to
me
and
to
begin
with,
we
have
a
communicable
diseases
quiz,
it's
called.
Can
you
catch
it?
And
it's
just
one
question.
So
the
question
has
to
do
with
measles
and
measles.
The
Hallmark
of
measle
is
that
you
want
a
person
would
get
a
rash
and
a
fever
as
high
as
105
degrees,
Fahrenheit
so
a
person.
So
the
question
is
a
person
with
measles
sneezes.
B
B
So,
according
to
the
CDC
9
out
of
10
people
with
close
contact
to
someone
who
is
sick
will
get
it
and,
interestingly
enough,
measles
are
more
contagious
than
Ebola
yeah
wow.
B
B
So
we
have
been
so
covid
Centric
the
last
three
years
that
we
just
went
as
we
talk
about
communicable
diseases,
think
about
RSV
influenza,
GI,
norovirus
and
other
vaccine
preventable
diseases.
B
Next
slide,
please:
what
I
like
to
watch
is
the
bug
watch
and
anybody
can
have
access
to
this
and
Children's
Hospital
Updates
this
on
a
weekly
basis
and,
as
you
all
remember,
during
November
and
December,
we
saw
an
uptick
of
RSV
and
influenza,
but
thankfully,
as
you'll
see
now
in
January
with
this
bug,
watch
graph,
the
red
line
r
for
RSV
and
the
blue
line
is
for
blue
flu
influenza,
and
so
you
can
see
as
of
January
1st
2023,
the
rates
of
influence
or
the
yeah
positive
specimen
count
has
been
decreasing
so
now,
RSB
hospitalizations
are
at
comparable
rates
to
other
previous
seasons.
B
Next
slide.
Please,
and
just
the
reporting
requirements
for
covid
is
that
you
only
need
to
report
to
us
at
Boulder
County,
Public
Health.
If
you
have
five
positive
covid
cases
and
of
those
five
cases,
two
of
those
are
confirmed.
Pcr
tests,
not
the
at-home
antigen
tests,
and
this
is
within
a
14-day
period,
next
slide.
B
Please,
and
we
are
curious-
the
epidemiologists
here
of
how
do
you
receive
your
illness
information
and
you
can
put
your
answer
in
the
chat
as
well,
because
we're
curious
when
parents
or
Guardians
call
in
is
it
a
live
person
receiving
the
phone
call
or
is
it
a
voicemail
or
I
know
some
facilities
have
an
app
other
facilities,
email
or
text,
and
then
other
facilities
do
other
things
and
some
of
them
do
all
of
the
above.
Okay.
B
So
I
think
this
is
super
helpful,
ABCDE.
Okay,
thank
you,
so
no
one's
using
the
old-fashioned
mailboxes
anymore.
So,
okay,
thank
you,
but
I
think
what
would
be
most
helpful
for
us
when
you
do
the
reporting
on
this
illness
log
is
if,
at
some
end
point
part
on
the
line
you
can
put.
Was
it
a
PCR
test,
or
was
it
an
at-home
covid
test?
If
you
don't
know,
that's
okay,
but
that
would
decrease
we'd
be
able
to
respond
to
a
greater
bride,
more
ECE
facilities.
B
If
you
could
put
that
on
this
illness
surveillance
form
and
the
other
thing
we
are
working
on
closing
up
29
outbreaks
since
November
and
one
part,
that's
slowing
us
down
is
a
lot
of
time.
People
are
printing
on
these
illness
surveillance
forms
and
we
need
to
report
this
data
to
the
state
and
we're
just
having
a
hard
time.
Reading
some
people's
printing
so
and
sometimes
people
take
a
picture
of
it
and
it's
really
light.
B
So
we
would
highly
appreciate
it
if,
every
time
you
send
us
your
illness
log,
if
you
could
just
really
make
sure
it's
legible
and
if
you
take
a
picture,
make
sure
it's
at
the
darkest
setting
and
ideally
we'd
love
for
you
to
type
it
in.
But
we
know
that
some
people
can't
do
that
all
the
time
so,
but
that
would
be
super
helpful
and
speed
up
our
process
of
trying
to
close
these
29
outbreaks,
so
that
would
be
greatly
appreciated.
Thank
you.
Okay.
Next
slide,
please
and
then
Marilee
who's.
B
C
Thank
you
so
much
Martha
I
appreciate
that
I
just
wanted
to
quickly
speak
to
how
much
we
appreciate
the
time
and
effort
that
goes
into
providing
us
your
accurate
and
timely
illness
logs,
because
they
are
so
important
and
I
wanted
to
make
sure
that
you
had
a
little
insight
onto
our
side
of
how
much
we
appreciate
those
and
what
the
purpose
of
them
is
and
and
why
we
find
them
so
useful.
So
three
things
the
first
one
to
think
about
is
that
you
all
are
serving
a
very
unique
population.
C
We
know
that
younger
children's
immune
systems
are
still
developing
they're,
not
eligible
for
all
vaccinations,
and
we
also
know
that
in
eces
there's
a
higher
rate
of
certain
infectious
diseases
and
attendees
are
also
more
likely
to
contract
an
illness
that
is
resistant
to
current
treatments
or
antibiotics.
C
So
it's
a
unique
population
and
it's
one
of
the
more
vulnerable
populations
in
our
community,
and
so
we
want
to
make
sure
that
they
have
extra
support
and
attention
and
I
know
that
it's
it's
a
lot
to
ask
for
one
more
thing:
on
top
of
everything
else
that
you're
doing
so.
Thank
you.
C
It
may
seem
like
that
we
have
eyes
and
ears
everywhere
and
we
know
exactly
what's
happening
in
the
community,
but
hearing
from
you
all
is
one
of
the
most
important
ways
that
we
can
early
have
an
early
detection
of
something
that's
new
I.
Think
one
of
the
best
examples
is
this
fall
where
we
had
an
unheard
of
amount
of
RSV.
It
was
out
of
season,
it
was
what
we
were
not
anticipating
and
we
were
able
to
sound
the
alarm
on
that
about
six
weeks
early
because
of
your
reports
to
us.
C
So
without
that
you
can
imagine
what
it's
like,
if
we
just
suddenly
are
blindsided
with
so
many
people
needing
additional
medical
care,
and
we
are
trying
to
figure
out
what's
happening,
you
were
our
red
flag.
You
were
our
early.
Our
early
detection,
there
I
think.
Also.
One
thing
that
is
important
to
know
is:
while
we
can
always
provide
Disease
Control
measures,
there's
a
lot
that
you
all
already
know,
but
if
there
is
something
new,
that's
available
in
the
community
that
we
can
make
sure
to
share
that
back
with
you.
C
If
there's
a
new
treatment,
if
there's
a
new
process,
if
there's
a
new
best
practice
that
you
have
that
feedback
loop
with
us
that
we're
letting
you
know,
one
specific
example,
I
would
say-
is,
for
example,
if
someone's
diagnosed
with
pertussis,
because
we
know
that
there
are
a
lot
of
other
children
in
the
same
congregate.
Setting
that
maybe
are
symptomatic.
We
know
that
they
will
need
either
preventive
or
treatment
with
a
certain
antibiotic,
if
someone's
diagnosed
with
a
certain
GI
illness.
C
C
So,
every
time
that
you
provide
information
to
us,
your
your
immensely
helpful
and
I
just
wanted
to
make
sure
that
you
knew
how
valuable
that
information
was
and
how
grateful
we
are
that
you
take
the
time
to
get
it
to
us
in
a
timely
manner
and,
of
course,
the
goal
is
to
keep
kids
healthy
and
in
school
and
and
parents
at
work
and
as
a
parent.
My
hats
are
off
to
you.
Thank
you.
B
Thank
you,
Marilee
and
Marilee
and
I
were
discussing
what
would
you
like
to
know
as
ECE
directors
and
facilities
in
the
future,
focusing
on
communicable
diseases,
so
any
disease
that
can
spread
from
person
to
person,
and
we
would
appreciate
that
feedback.
There's
three
different
ways.
You
could
send
it
to
us
one.
You
could
just
type
it
in
the
chat
right
now
and
Marilee
and
I
will
take
a
running
list
of
all
of
those
or
you
could
just
email
me
at
thehealth,
ECE
at
bouldercounty.org
web
inbox
or
we're
looking
at
doing
an
upcoming
survey.
B
A
Thank
you,
Martha
I'll,
I
think.
A
Did
a
great
job
of
covering
it
and
Chris
is
going
to
give
us
some
updates
on
the
Emergency
Management.
So
I'll
turn
the
slides
over
to
you.
E
Thanks
Jane
hi
everyone.
It's
it's
great
to
see
you
again.
My
name
is
Chris
Campbell
I'm,
the
emergency
manager
with
Boulder
County,
Public,
Health
and
I,
just
before
I
jump
into
a
discussion
with
you
all
I
just
wanted
again
to
it's
been
a
while,
since
I've
met
with
you
and
I
just
want
to
thank
this
group
again
for
you're.
E
Just
tremendous
leadership
and
work
with
the
really
with
children
in
early
childhood
community
and
working
with
us
at
Public,
Health
I
was
just
looking
it'll,
be
we
deployed
our
Emergency
Operations
plan
as
an
agent,
the
public
health
agency
for
the
Cove
pandemic
on
January
24th
of
2020.
So
it's
amazing
to
think
we're
three
years
in
to
this
response
together
and
I've
been
in
meetings
with
you.
All
that
have
been
challenging
and
I
just
want
to.
Thank
you
all
again
for
for
your
leadership
and
and
support
of
the
community.
E
I'm
gonna
share
my
screen
here
and
get
started
I.
One
thing
you
know
the
where
we're
at
in
the
pandemic.
It
is
certainly
nice
to
be
at
a
at
a
time
where
we
I
can
look
at
preparedness
planning
and
getting
back
to
ensuring
that
the
safety
of
children
that
are
working
in
early
childhood,
that
you're
working
with
and
supporting
so
I'm
just
going
to
go
over
just
some
brief
things
here.
E
Just
to
so,
we
can
talk
through
and
just
think
about
some
of
the
preparedness
we
need
to
do
some
of
the
hazards
we
see
in
the
county,
hopefully
answer
some
questions
about
how
you
can
be
notified
about
evacuation
warnings,
Etc
and
just
really
encourage
you
to
really
think
about
your
emergency
plans,
your
evacuation
plans
and
some
of
the
support
we
can
help
you
with
there
so
jump
into
that.
Also
joining
me
is
Colleen.
E
Sinclair
Colleen
is
an
emergency
planner
with
Boulder
County,
Public
Health
certainly
answer
some
questions
as
we
go
along
you're.
Welcome
to
stop
me
as
we
we
jump
into
this
a
little
bit,
so
this
is
actually
from
a
presentation
we've
also
given
to
the
our
providers
on
the
long-term
care
and
assisted
living
homes
that
work
with
community
members
living
there
and
and
I
think.
What
we
know
is,
after
we've,
seen
many
fires
recently:
mass
casualty
incidents,
mass
shootings,
floods
in
the
past
severe
winter
weather.
E
So
this
really
is
is
not
going
to
change.
We
know.
Climate
change
is
impacting
this
as
well,
so
it's
it's
clear
that
these
hazards
going
to
continue
with
Boulder
County
from
a
public
health
side
and
I
think
you
all
probably
know
this
many
of
you
that
live
in
the
county
for
a
while
some
top
hazards
we
see
and
we
prepare
for
particularly
for
larger
responses,
certainly
fire.
Some
flaws
natural
disasters,
as
we've
seen
with
the
very
recent
cold
that
you've
all
might
have
been
impacted
by
severe
winter
weather.
E
We
we
certainly
clearly
see
outbreaks.
We
prepare
for
mass
casualty
or
mass
fatality
incidents,
whatever
they
may
be.
You
know
worst
case
a
hazardous
materials
incident
and
you
all
might
have
been
impacted
by
Communications
or
technological
outages.
So
those
are
things
we
work
with
prepare
for
as
a
public
health
agency
and,
along
with
the
community
I
just
wanted
to
reinforce
that
we
we,
unfortunately
Boulder
County
have
a
lot
of
practice,
and
so
we
have
a
really
robust
response
structure
in
the
county.
E
Public
health
is
a
big
leader
in
that
and
and
work
within
that.
So
with
this
group
again,
we
just
want
to
continue
to
stay
connected
with
you
and
let
you
know
that
we
are
part
of
that
broader
response
structure.
I
know
this
is
probably
hard
to
see
we'll
send
this
out
afterwards,
but
we
work
with
other
agencies,
other
partners
in
the
county
in
the
city
of
Boulder
work,
along
with
the
Longmont
office
of
emergency
management
as
well,
and
really
work
in
a
kind
of
all
hazards
response.
E
E
You
know
I
was
I,
was
doing
a
little
research
and
on
the
Early
Childhood
side,
there's
there's
not
a
lot
of
good
information
out
there
about
a
hazard,
vulnerability
assessment.
I
did
like
this
graphic
and
something
you
should
consider.
I
was
really
thinking
about
the
things
that
might
impact
you
in
your
organization.
So
would
it
be
a
natural
natural
disaster?
Would
it
be
a
fire?
Would
it
be
workplace
violence,
something
like
that
so
consider
those
hazards?
This
really
is
going
to
be
some
of
the
pre-planning
I.
E
Think
you
need
to
consider
consider
some
of
those
vulnerabilities
then
clearly
the
the
children
that
that
you
are
working
with
and
educating
those
are
going
to
be
I,
don't
like
the
term
assets,
but
certainly
something
that
could
be
a
vulnerability
for
you
all
to
to
work
at
and
keep
safe
in
the
community
and
then
consider
those
impacts.
E
E
You
know
you
have
a
wildfire
where
you
might
be
look.
You
know
a
wildfire
scenario
that
will
impact
your
your
organization,
your
operation,
and
you
have
to
evacuate.
What
does
that
look
like
what
partners
are?
Are
you
working
with?
How
are
you,
how
are
you
working
with
families
and
and
caregivers?
Do
you
consider
an
evacuation
versus
filtering
in
place,
for
example,
and
then
really
dig
in
your
policies
and
procedures?
Look
at
how
you're
going
to
communicate
together,
look
at
your
transportation
options
and
also
and
work
towards
testing
and
training.
E
So
just
something
that
again
just
to
get
the
wheel
spinning.
We
can
certainly
come
back
another
time
and
dig
into
this
a
little
deeper,
but
as
we
start
to
roll
in
the
year,
we
wanted
to
discuss
this
with
you
all.
So,
okay,
just
one
thing,
I
know
that
might
be
helpful
for
us
to
discuss,
is,
is
alert
and
warning,
and
some
of
the
dynamic
or
some
of
the
some
of
the
issues
that
are
going
on
with
that
in
the
in
our
community.
E
There's
a
there's,
a
couple,
different
options
or
a
couple
different
ways
that
you
would
be
alerted.
Should
it
be
a
wildfire
or
flood.
For
example,
one
is
called
a
wireless
emergency
alert,
so
those
are
the
ones
that
you
may
be
familiar.
We
had
a
fire
in
Longmont
last
year
that
there
was
there
was
warnings
that
went
as
far
as
Wyoming.
There
was
warnings
that
went
to
Superior
and
the
fire
is
actually
in
Longmont.
E
E
You
see
out
there
that
where
you
get
those
alerts
and
then
what
it
does,
is
it
it
there's
a
defined
boundary
and
it
hits
it
has
cell
phone
towers,
but
there's
a
lot
of
there's
a
lot
of
Dynamics
there's
a
lot
of
issues
that
come
up
with
that
where
you
might
get
an
alerts,
you
are
able
to
sign
up
with
our
office
of
disaster,
Emergency
Management
in
Boulder
County
to
to
get
a
direct
alert
and
that's
based
on
your
location,
your
address,
and
it
really
does
help,
and
it
is
most
accurate,
there's
something
impacting
you
will
get
this
alert
and
we'll
talk
about
how
you
can
sign
up
for
that.
E
I
do
believe
in
our
office.
Emergency
Management,
there's
also
ways
of
getting
email
updates,
and
so
we'll
point
you
to
the
page
where
you
can
sign
up
for
that.
E
I
don't
want
to
go
too
far
on
this.
I'll
share
this
in
that
when
we
share
the
the
presentation.
This
just
talks
about
why
that
wireless
emergency
alert
is
maybe
inaccurate
at
times,
there's
just
a
lot
of
partners
that
are
involved,
including
the
emergency
alert
system.
We
have
Noah
that's
involved
in
that
wireless
emergency
alert,
so
it's
really
there's
several
Partners
or
several
stakeholders
that
come
into
play
that
sometimes
then
push
that
app
a
little
more
broadly
than
it
needs
to
be.
E
So
what
I
would
consider
if
you
haven't
done
so,
is
to
sign
up.
You
know
for
your
organization
with
everbridge
on
our
office
of
disaster,
Emergency
Management
we'll
send
this
information
out
to
you.
If
you
haven't
done
so
put
your
addresses
in
there
and
then
you
will
definitely
get
those
direct,
those
direct
notifications.
It
has
directions
on
there.
E
What
I
want
to
skip
to
is
just
really
talk
about
the
the
importance
of.
If
you
receive
those
alerts,
you
really
should
take
a
step
back
and
and
think
about
situational
awareness
check,
really
maybe
go
outside
and
look
outside
and
see
what
you're,
seeing
if
it's
safe
to
do
so
go
to
the
emergency
status
page
where
that
ever
Bridge
alert
came
from
and
really
check
on.
If
things
are
accurate,
we'll
know
pretty
quickly.
If
again,
if
that's
an
area
where
there's
a
fire,
that's
really
not
that
close
to
you.
E
You
just
need
to
check
on
that
and
verify
information,
sometimes
in
the
early
stages
of
of
an
emergency
or
disaster.
Information
might
be
sparse,
so
really
check
lots
of
sources.
You
can
check
social
media
and
really
dig
into
I
would
really
go
to
that
trusted
source
of
our
office
of
disaster,
Emergency
Management
to
verify
these
alerted
warnings,
and
then
you
can
start
to
make
decisions
on
does.
Should
we
consider
evacuation?
E
Should
we
consider
staying
in
place
or
Sheltering
in
place
some
other
and
again
this
was
one
for
more
of
our
our
other
Healthcare
facilities.
We
might
want
to
consider
your
impacts
here
at
your
HVAC
or
your
systems.
You
have
there
your
systems
that
are
bringing
things
in
you
might
want
to
turn
that
off.
If
there's
a
lot
of
smoke.
E
Something
to
consider
but
really
another
thing
is,
you
know
you're,
ultimately
up
you
and
your
leadership,
your
directors,
your
your
teams,
your
leadership
teams
are
really
empowered
to
make
those
decisions.
If
you
never,
if
you
feel
at
a
point
and
you're
not
feeling
safe,
really
make
that
decision
quickly
and
feel
confident
about
it
to
to
evacuate
or
shelter
in
place.
E
So
yeah
that
was
just
a
real,
quick
overview.
I
just
want
to
touch
on
a
couple
things
in
terms
of
preparedness
and
individual
preparedness
or
organizational
preparedness.
I
will
say
that
on
the
Emergency
Management
side
we
we
are,
we
do
maintain
an
on-call
person,
24
7,
so
don't
hesitate
to
call
that
number.
If
you
have
questions
you
know
again,
I
think
the
important
thing
is
is
for
you
and
your
organization
to
really
consider
and
I
know.
Many
of
you
are
required
to
do
emergency
plans,
evacuation
plans.
E
You
know
so
really
look
into
that,
but
just
know
that
you're
not
alone.
You
have
this.
This
team
supporting
you.
You
have
our
Emergency
Management
side.
You
ever
offer
office
of
emergency
management
there
to
support
you,
so
so
just
keep
that
in
mind
and
I
think
I'll
stop
talking
there
nude.
It
wasn't
quite
as
interactive
as
as
the
last
one
completely,
but
I
just
want
to
share
some
information
so
happy
to
answer
any
questions.
A
There's
a
question
in
chat
about
a
possible
mountain
lion
on
campus.
Oh.
E
Boy,
that's
an
interesting
Hazard,
maybe
call
Lincoln
day,
though
so
Colleen
lives,
lives
up
in
the
peak
to
Peak
area
and
sees
a
lot
of
has
seen
a
lot
of
activity
with
with
mountain
lions
recently,
but
I
do
think
you
know
that
is
more
of
an
animal
control
stride
or
the
the
law
enforcement
might
be
able
to
inform
you
on
that.
E
So
I,
you
know
I
think
again
worst
case
you
do
consider
calling
maybe
that
non-emergency
number
for
9-1-1,
but
also,
if
you
do
not
feel
safe,
I
would
call
9-1-1
and
they
will
route
to
the
proper
area.
I
do
think
that,
again
on
that
animal
control
side,
they
might
have
some
information.
They
could
share
with
you
to
remain
safe.
F
F
A
Yeah,
and
that
would
apply
to
really
any
wild
animals
correct,
skunks,
we've
seen
that
might
have
be
acting
differently
or
any
any
other
wild
animal.
F
E
Okay,
well
again,
I
just
want
to
want
to
thank
you
all
and
I
I
do
encourage
you
to
really
consider
looking
at
your
emergency
plans
again
and
again
it's
about
just
being
prepared
having
those
scenario-based
conversations
walking
through
that
with
with
staff
and
and
really
you
know
again,
it
takes
a
little
bit
of
work
ahead
of
time,
but
I
think
it'll
be
really
beneficial
to
to
start
to
look
at
that
into
this
new
year.
So
I
really
appreciate
your
time
and
again
feel
free
to
reach
out.
A
You
Chris
and
and
I'll
just
add
that
if
you
want
more
of
those
Emergency
Management
planning,
you
can
add
that
to
your
list
of
what
you'd
like
to
see
on
this
call,
and
we
can
break
it
down
the
more
specific
the
easier
it
will
be
for
us
to
respond.
So
I
really
appreciate
that.
Thank
you
Chris.
A
So
we'll
do
a
partner
update
if
we
have
Jody
from
CCAP
available
anything
to
update
us
on.
G
Hi,
thank
you
Jane
and
thank
you
to
all
the
public
health
staff.
Always
great
information
shared
I
wanted
to
Express
gratitude
for
everyone
who
has
all
the
partner
agencies.
It's
just
been
I
part.
Sorry,
partner
programs
who
have
renewed
we've
had
over.
You
know
250
renewals
of
contracts
in
the
last
year,
and
then
I
meant
to
have
the
exact
number,
but
about
25,
new
and
returning
programs.
So
that's
been
so
great.
G
Thank
you
and
then
I'm
in
just
a
second
I'm
going
to
put
in
the
new
there's,
been
a
lot
of
enhancements
and
improvements
to
the
program
in
terms
of
payment
and
absence
policies
that
I
wanted
to
share
with
you,
so
I'm
going
to
put
that
information
in,
but
just
so
just
to
kind
of
put
it
out
there
for
and
remind
folks
who
are
already
participating
absence
payments
are
up
to
six
days
paid
for
Quality
ratings,
one
and
two
and
up
to
seven
days
paid
per
month.
G
Pro
authorization
for
levels
three
through
five
and
then
I
I've,
heard
a
rumor
out
there
that
there's
a
wait
list
for
CCAP
families.
There
is
not.
It
does
sometimes
take
us
a
little
while
to
process
applications,
we're
doing
pretty
well
right
now
and
getting
them
within
about
five
days
and
that
won't
last
in
in
the
fall
and
in
this
in
the
summer.
G
It'll
go
back
up
to
about
10
days,
but
there
is
no
wait
list
to
to
qualify
and
be
eligible
for
families
for
ccaps,
so
again,
I'm
going
to
put
The
Sim
to
the
new
center
rates
that
just
were
updated
in
October,
since
there
were
increases
almost
across
the
board
for
reimbursement
rates
to
programs
and
just
I'm
hoping
you
know
some
of
our
new
partners
that
are
out
of
County
hoping
to
get
some
new
Partners
within
the
county
sign
up
for
some
CCAP
spots.
Any
questions.
G
My
information
will
pop
into
the
chat
here
soon
and
I'll
be
on
until
the
end
of
the
call
soon.
Thank
you.
A
Thank
you,
Jody
I
am
do
we
have
Amy
Carlo
or
Mary
Lynn
for
the
early
childhood
Early
Childhood
Council,
please
hi.
H
H
If
you
have
anyone
in
your
programs,
that's
interested
in
taking
expanding
quality
and
infant
toddler
care
and
they
can
register
on
our
website
and
we're
also
excited
to
be
offering
another
touch,
points,
training
in
the
end
of
February,
February,
23rd,
24th
and
25th,
and
that's
an
excellent
opportunity,
as
universal
preschools,
coming
soon
to
just
learn
more
about
parent
child
and
provider
and
family
relationships
and
strengthen
your
relationships
with
with
families,
and
we
finding
that
it's
just
great
for
staff
retention,
and
we
are
looking
forward
to
offering
that
in
the
end
of
February
and
we'll
have
reflective
practice
session
dates
that
we're
still
working
on
those
will
be
on
Wednesday
evenings,
probably
in
March,
and
registration
will
open
soon,
for
that
and
I
also
wanted
to
invite
anyone
who's
interested
in
joining
our
professional
development
committee.
H
Our
next
meeting
is
the
first
Wednesday
of
February
they're,
always
on
the
first
Wednesday
of
each
month
and
there
their
online
via
Zoom,
from
10
o'clock
to
11
o'clock
and
in
these
next
several
months,
the
PD
committee
is
charged
with
looking
at
a
developing
a
kindergarten,
kindergarten
ready,
Readiness
statement
as
eccbc
is
the,
as
you
all
know,
the
lco
local
coordinating
Organization
for
Universal
preschool.
H
A
Thank
you,
Amy
I
am
I'm,
never
sure
if
someone
from
the
Colorado
Department
of
Early
Childhood
is
available,
but
if
you're
on
the
call
and
would
like
to
give
an
update,
you
we're
we've
reserved
this
space
for
you.
D
D
It's
a
very
exciting
and
busy
time
for
us
all
as
it
seems
to
always
be,
but
with
the
creation
of
the
Department
of
Early
Childhood,
there
is
a
rules,
advisory
committee
that
is
meeting
or
sorry
Council
rules,
advisory,
Council,
that's
meeting
if
you
aren't
receiving
those
updates
I
would
encourage
you
to
look
into
it.
D
Now
is
the
time
to
definitely
speak
to
those
rules
and
provide
public
comments,
and
so
that
information
I
will
throw
in
the
chat
for
you
see
here,
looks
like
I'm
going
to
need
to
shorten
my
message
a
little
bit,
but
I
will
put
that
in
the
chat.
D
A
A
J
Hi,
it's
good
to
hear
everybody
I'm
glad
you're,
all
here
and
Chris.
Thank
you
for
that,
because
I
was
in
one
of
the
pre-evacuation
zones
of
the
fire
the
other
day
and
was
like
I'm,
not
ready
for
this.
So
again,
a
nice
reminder
and
a
resolution
that
I
have
this
new
year
to
make
sure
I'm
ready
for
an
emergency.
J
My
name
is
Kyla.
Pearlman
I've
been
with
child
health
promotion
for
about
a
year
and
a
half
supporting
mostly
the
healthy
eating
and
active
living
portions
of
what
we
do
and
if
you've
taken
any
of
our
heel
trainings
in
the
last
year
and
a
half
you've
probably
seen
me
I'm,
usually
with
Tori
she's,
our
nutrition
Guru,
and
so
always
a
nice.
J
J
J
But
since
maybe
you
already
have
the
second
Monday
of
the
month
reserved
on
your
calendar
from
noon
to
one,
we
wanted
to
take
advantage
of
this
opportunity
to
provide
some
training
snacks
for
you
and
just
sort
of
wet
your
appetite
with
what
other
types
of
healthy
eating
active,
living,
Farm
to
ECE
types
of
trainings
that
we
provide.
So
we've
scheduled
the
February
training
and
the
March
training
just
to
see
how
you
guys
like
it
and
want
all
your
feedback.
J
Of
course,
these
will
just
be
I,
think
for
February
we're
going
to
do
kind
of
a
high
level
overview
of
healthy
eating
and
active
living
for
some
of
you
who
this
is
brand
new
topic,
or
it's
been
a
long
time
since
you've
had
a
training
on
on
heel
and
want
to
get
up
to
speed
on
what's
what's
the
latest
or
just
remembering
what
you
already
knew
and
have
forgotten,
and
anyone
is
welcome,
so
directors,
Cooks
teachers.
J
Anybody
in
your
facility
we'd
be
happy
to
have
you
and
then,
let's
see
next
slide
yeah.
So
this
is
our
our
sort
of
plan
for
the
next
couple
of
months
anyway
is
doing
healthy.
Eating.
Active
living
in
February,
something
related
to
farm
to
ECE
in
March.
There
may
be
other
timely
announcements
we
might.
If
there's
something
going
on
with
communicable
disease,
we
might
have
Martha
step
in
and
give
us
a
little
update
or
something,
and
these
will
be
you'll-
be
able
you'll.
J
You
will
earn
one
training
hour
for
the
health,
safety
and
nutrition
for
your
Colorado
shines
points
and
next
slide
and
then
also
in
the
the
world
of
of
heal,
Tori
and
I
will
be
reaching
out
to
all
of
the
currently
recognized
heel
programs
at
the
end
of
January,
the
beginning
of
February,
to
do
a
renewal,
as
all
of
us
have
been
a
little
off-kilter
since
the
pandemic
started.
J
It's
been
a
while,
since
we've
done
a
check-in,
so
we
just
want
to
make
sure
that
you're
still
able
to
to
meet
the
heel,
certification
requirements,
heel,
recognition,
requirements
to
be
a
heel
friendly
child
care
and
provide
any
support
that
you
may
have
if
you've
slipped
in
an
area
as
we
all
have
in
the
last
couple
of
years
and
just
help
you
maintain
that
recognition
so
that
you'll
look
out
for
that,
that'll
be
coming
soon
from
me
and
Tori
and
if
you're
interested
in
heel
recognition.
But
you
haven't
done
that
in
the
past.
J
Please
definitely
reach
out
to
us,
because
we
would
love
to
get
you
on
board.
We
are
also
providing
in-person
training
at
your
program.
I
know
that
not
all
of
you,
but
many
of
you
have
professional
development
days
or
staff
meetings
set
aside
for
trainings
and
staff
from
child
health
promotion
can
come
and
provide
support
in
training
healthy
eating,
active
living
Farm
to
ECE
breastfeeding.
J
Whatever
your
particular
thing
is
that
your
facility
needs
some
support
with
we'd,
be
happy
to
come
and
do
a
training
for
all
of
your
staff,
and
we
know
that
in-person
training
doesn't
work
for
everyone
all
the
time,
so
we're
still
have
virtual
training
as
an
option,
so
definitely
reach
out,
and
let
us
know
if,
if
virtual
is
going
to
work
better
for
you
and
and
we'll
we'll
work
with
what
what
you
all
need,
because
that's
what
we're
trying
to
do
is
figure
out
the
best
way
to
support
your
programs
and
meet
your
needs
where
you're
at
so.
J
If
you
have
any
questions
about
the
next,
the
February
and
March
trainings
that
we'll
be
doing
on
on
the
Monday
at
noon
virtual
or
any
in-person
and
trainings
that
you're
interested
in
or
anything
on,
heel.
Recognition,
please
reach
out
to
me.
I'll
put
my
contact
in
the
in
the
chat
as
well
or
really.
Anyone
in
child
health
promotion
can
get
you
in
touch
with
me
or
Tori
to
help
support
you
in
this.
J
A
Thank
you,
Kyla
and
I
I
put
these
links
in
the
slides
just
so
that
when
we
send
this
out
with
the
recording
you'll,
have
it,
but
we'll
also
do
a
reminder.
A
And
now
is
the
time
for
any
questions
and-
and
we've
kind
of
reiterated-
well
I
put
this
on
our
final
slide,
but
that
first
Monday
of
each
quarter
will
be
more
like
today
with
some
communical
disease.
A
Maybe
some
agency
updates
and
then
the
other
two
months
of
the
quarter
will
will
be
child
health
promotion
and
that's
where
we
really
need
your
input
on
chat
via
the
healthy
CE
or
or
you
can
email
me
directly
with
what
topics
would
best
meet
your
needs
and
and
how
we
can
support
you
so
I'm
going
to
drop
the
screen
and
and
leave
it
open
for
any
questions.
K
Yes,
thanks
Jane,
so
I
did
see
in
the
chat
that
Martha
had
found
a
electronic
version
of
the
illness
surveillance
form,
but
Martha
I
there's
also
a
comment
in
there
that
maybe
it's
not
Lincoln
correctly
so
I
just
wanted
to
make
you
aware
of
that
and
I
think
maybe
Jane.
What
we
should
do
is
when
we
include
the
minutes
of
the
meeting
include
that
electronic
illness
report,
so
everybody
can
have
that.
B
Yeah,
yes,
that
is
true.
We're
watching
it.
It
seems,
as
influenza
and
RSV
are
decreasing
covet
is
increasing,
so
continue
to
follow
what
you
know
so
well
from
what
you've
learned
and
done
over
the
last
three
years
and
please
reach
out
to
us
with
more
information
for
more
information
and
again
with
reporting.
I've
had
quite
a
few
questions
in
the
health
ECE
inbox
of
whether
they
should
people
should
report
individual
cases.
B
But
the
answer
is
no
just
if
there's
five
cases
or
more
and
two
of
them
need
to
be
a
PCR
test
within
a
14-day
period,
so
keep
following
all
the
good
things
that
you
learned
with
good
hand:
washing
disinfection,
sanitation,
isolation,
keeping
sick
kids
at
home,
so
but
going
back
to
the
illness
log.
Could
some
other
people
use
that
link
and
see
if
they're
getting
the
same
thing?
B
Whether
Pueblo
is
popping
up
because
I
just
copy
and
pasted
it
again
and
mine
didn't
show
Pueblo,
but
I
want
to
make
sure
you
could
just
put
feedback
in
the
chat.
That
would
be
super
helpful
because
our
Boulder
County
Public
Health,
her
name
is
Debbie
Martinez.
She
just
made
it
while
we
were
on
while
we
were
live
here.
It's
pretty
amazing
and
but
I
want
to
make
sure
that
it
is
usable,
so
some
other
people
could
open
it
as
well
that
be
helpful.
B
And
maybe
I
need
to
download
it
and
upload
it,
but
link,
says
I:
don't
have
access
as
Kyla.
Okay,
thank
you
for
all
this
feedback.
We
will
make
sure
everyone
has
at
access
ask
for
a
login
from
bcph.
Okay,
thank
you
so
much.
We
will
work
on
this
and
then
Jane
I
think
will
send
out
an
update
to
all
of
you
once
it's
working.
Well,
yes,
thank
you.
K
You
know,
there's
not
a
lot
of
questions.
A
I
see
one
on
covid
is
on
the
rise
yeah.
We.
K
Just
talked
about
that,
and
then
there
is
some
there's
comments
early
on
in
the
meeting.
I
guess
for
those
who
are
on
the
phone
who
can't
see
the
chat
is
about
the
closing
of
the
community
covet
testing
sites
I'm
trying
to
go
back
in
the
notes,
but
I
I
think
it
was
the
15th
January
15th
of
this
of
this
year
is
when
they
are
going
to
close.
A
Maryland
answered
a
couple
questions
that
you
might
want
to
read:
I'm,
not
sure.
If
some
people
are
on
their
phone,
it
looks
like
they.
K
K
There
was
a
link
to
the
illness
form
the
illness
surveillance
form
again,
just
the
general
link
to
print
out
but,
like
Martha,
said,
we'll
work
on
getting
an
electronic
version
and
feel
free.
If
anybody
is
seeing
thing
as
I
go
through
speak
up.
K
A
Shannon's
link
I
will
include
in
the
notes
yeah
from
the
rules
advisory
committee.
They
call
it
the
rack
committee
if
you
haven't
seen
that
send
that.
A
And
merrily
Martha
anything
you'd
like
to
add.
B
No
I
think
we
appreciate
your
quick
feedback
and
Debbie's
working
on
making
the
a
fillable
Excel
that
everyone
can
have
access
to
I
Look
to
it's
a
read
only
so
she
just
adds
to
change
one
setting
and
then
you
all
should
be
able
to
use
it.
So
thank
you
for
that
quick
feedback
and
thank
you
for
typing
it
in
that
will
speed
up
our
ability
to
close
some
of
those
outbreaks.
So
thanks
so
much
yeah.
A
Amy
I
Amy
Carlos,
there's
a
question
about
eccbc,
upk
updates
or
trainings.
If
you
want
to
point
them
to
the
Early
Childhood
Council
website
that
might
address
that,
or
you
have
an
answer
to
that.
H
A
There's
a
question
about
the
upk:
maybe
the
local
control
organization
website
might
have
some
of
that
update
on
trainings
and
so
forth.
I
know
that
yeah.
H
There
should
be
more
information
coming
out
our
team.
We
are
in
the
process
director
and
we
should
have
more
information
coming
out
from
our
team
here
soon.
I
don't
have
that
information,
but
but
stay
tuned.
It
will
be
coming
out
perfect.
A
A
A
A
Right
then,
I'm
about
to
give
you
10
to
12
minutes
back
to
your
day.
Unless
there's
any
other
questions,
I,
don't
Debbie
I,
don't
believe
we
can
answer
anything
about
pdis
challenges.
That's
unless
Shannon
is
that's
a
an
office
of
early
Department
of
Early
Childhood
question
I,
don't
know
if
Shannon
is
still
available
to
answer
any
of
that.
A
If
it's
a
specific
question
Debbie,
maybe
you
can
contact
the
the
phone
line
you.
I
D
I
Think
in
general
it's
the
conversion
and
trying
to
get
everything
migrated
into
one
place
and
it
just
seems
like
it
hasn't
been.
You
know
the
system
isn't
responding
cluelessly,
so
there's
been
challenges
with
getting
people
onto
a
certain
level
and
then
just
the
general
migration.
So
I
just
point
that
out
maybe
you've
already.
You
know
you're
hearing
about
this
yeah.
D
There's
there's
been
quite
a
few
pieces
with
PBIS,
but
the
best
advice
is
to
reach
out
to
the
help
desk
by
email,
and
they
should
be
able
to
help
with
that
migration
of
the
accounts.
A
All
right,
then
I
unless
there's
any
other
questions,
I
really
again
appreciate
it.
We
are
really
excited
to
start
a
new
year
with
them,
maybe
a
fresh
start,
and
we
will
be
in
in
contact
regarding
the
updates
that
we'll
use
the
other
two
meetings
for,
but
I'll
send
out
this
PowerPoint
in
this
recording
so
that
you'll
have
access
to
that
information
as
well.
So
thank
you
all
enjoy
the
rest
of
your
day
and
happy
New
Year.