Natick High School will remain open following news that two students tested positive for the coronavirus Monday night after their parent was presumptively confirmed to have the respiratory infection last week, town officials said.

A resident in the community was diagnosed Sunday with disease, named COVID-19. The individual’s children were pulled from school and remained at home as the family self-quarantined.

“As of late last night, the Board of Health was notified that the students have also been found to be presumptive positive cases of COVID-19,” Dr. Anna Nolin, superintendent of Natick Public Schools, and Jim White, director of public health in the town, said in a joint statement.

Massachusetts Gov. Charlie Baker declared a state of emergency Tuesday following a growing number of coronavirus cases in the commonwealth and the country. Ninety-one positive presumptive COVID-19 diagnoses have been made in the state, and one patient was confirmed to have the disease in January. The total number of cases in Massachusetts remains at 92 as of Tuesday afternoon.

Natick High School’s building was shut down Sunday so janitors, using recommended protective gear, could sanitize all classrooms and spaces in the facility, the statement said. The school was also cleaned Friday and Saturday.

The teenagers diagnosed with COVID-19 have not been in contact with any students or staff since they quarantined themselves last week. The family and its contacts will continue to be monitored by the Natick Board of Health and the Massachusetts Department of Public health, according to Nolin and White.

The parent of the students reportedly visited a restaurant in the town called The Lookout Taproom on Feb. 29. The restaurant told The Metrowest Daily News it has closed in order to conduct a deep clean.

School events and field trips in Natick remain unaffected, but out-of-state travel has been cancelled per Baker’s guidance, the officials said.

“Due to the family-initiated quarantine of the students and the proactive cleaning measures taken last week, the status of Natick High School remains open and unchanged,” Nolin and White said.

The town of Natick is located in Middlesex County, where 41 presumptive cases of the disease have been confirmed, according to DPH’s website. Two residents in Winchester, another town in the county, received positive COVID-19 diagnoses Tuesday as well.

“We understand that this entire situation is alarming, and we share information so that our community knows how vigilant we are about tracking of possible cases,” Natick school and health officials said. “We will continue to assess and monitor the situation at all of our schools and within the town as a whole.”

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