NEWARK WEATHER

Stark schools invest in bipolar ionization, air ventilation technology


Taft Elementary school second grader Emma Albu reads in class near the school's air ventilation system. Plain Local is among the roughly dozen local school districts that have recently upgraded its ventilation system in an effort to prevent the spread of the coronavirus.

They’ve used physical distancing. They’ve followed strict cleaning and contract tracing protocols. They’ve tried masks.

And now, many Stark County-area schools are upgrading their air ventilation systems to help prevent the spread of the coronavirus and other harmful or noxious air pollutants. 

A survey of Stark County-area public school districts shows that at least a dozen districts have upgraded their air ventilation systems in at least one of their buildings since 2020 or are planning to do so this spring and summer. Money sent to school districts to help them with COVID-19 mitigation strategies, known as Elementary and Secondary School Emergency Relief funds, has covered the cost of nearly all of the projects.

A majority of the school districts have turned to a new technology, called bipolar ionization, that seeks to neutralize airborne viruses using equipment that can be attached to a school’s existing air ventilation system. 



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