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Best Practices for Hosting a Physical Camp during a Pandemic


The last post detailed when it is acceptable to host a physical camp in accordance with expert health guidance. 

This post applies that guidance to the daily operations of a camp. We’re providing it here because we want everyone to be safe. We strongly encourage every organization hosting a physical camp to follow these practices.


Room Arrangement


Keep high-traffic areas clear

A six-foot area will be marked on both sides of major doors. Stopping will not be permitted within that radius.

Family seating

Families will be seated together at tables that are six feet apart.

Forward-facing seating

Tables will all face forward, instead of the roundtable/auditorium arrangements we normally prefer.

Path to tables

Families must be able to walk from the door to their table without coming within 6 feet of another table.


Hygiene


Hand Washing 3x a day

All attendees will be required to wash their hands at the beginning, lunch break, and end of each camp day. Of course, these are bare minimums. 

Sanitizer on each table

A bottle of hand sanitizer will be placed on each table and provided to the coaches.

Face coverings

Attendees will be required to wear face coverings. Exceptions will be made for very young children.

No sharing

Attendees will not share any physical items (food, pens, etc) with each other.


Social Distancing


Distanced during breaks

Instead of the mingling that we prefer in a non-pandemic scenario, attendees will maintain social distancing during breaks. 

Separate coach lodging

We love staying with families, but that means breaking quarantines. For now, coaches must be hosted in hotels or guest houses (or their own homes, if possible), separate from families and each other.


Enforcing the Rules


Signs and orientation

Signs will be posted and an orientation will be held at the start of the camp to ensure all attendees know what is expected of them.

No negotiation

Attendees may not ignore these rules – if they think they are overkill, or they are “willing to risk it”, or they don’t feel sick, or for any other reason. 

1-warning enforcement

Attendees who violate these safety rules will be given one warning. On the second offense, they will be banned from camp without appeal. 

Is that strict? Yes. It’s because we’re serious about the health of this community. We do not gamble with the lives of debate families, and we will not tolerate anyone else doing so.

Stop if someone gets sick

If a coach or attendee shows COVID-like symptoms, the camp will stop immediately.


We Know This is Annoying.


Again, we wish we could just pretend COVID-19 wasn’t happening. But cutting corners kills people. It is unethical to disregard the guidance of health officials just because we really miss physical camps. We won’t do it, you shouldn’t do it, and you shouldn’t trust anyone who will. 

We’ll continue to keep you updated on the possibility of physical camps, as well as our exciting schedule of upcoming online camps. We share everyone’s hope that coronavirus will stop spreading, and that treatment and testing will be readily available soon.


Be well.


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