L.A. schools to open vaccination site specifically for school staff
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[February 18, 2021]
By Brendan O'Brien and Sharon Bernstein
(Reuters) - A COVID-19 vaccination site
specifically for educators will open soon in Los Angeles County, school
officials said on Wednesday, as teachers in the area's largest school
district demand vaccine access before returning to in-person learning.
The site at SoFi Stadium in Inglewood, California, was announced a day
after the county reached a threshold of fewer than 25 new cases per
100,000 people for five consecutive days. At that level, the state gives
districts the discretion to resume in-person instruction for
kindergarten through sixth grade if they have met other conditions.
The site will have the capacity to vaccinate more than 10,000 public and
private school teachers, administrators and staff across Los Angeles
County. A final decision on reopening rests with each of the county's 80
school districts, including Los Angeles Unified School District, with
600,000 students.
"A dedicated vaccination site and comprehensive effort for the education
community would allow schools to reopen sooner and in a more coordinated
manner," Los Angeles Unified School District Superintendent Austin
Beutner said.
But the union in the Los Angeles Unified School District, the second
biggest U.S. school system, on Tuesday opposed a reopening until the
county's infection rate is much lower.
The L.A. Unified Teachers Union said its threshold for reopening in the
county is a seven-day average of seven new cases per 100,000 people. It
also insists teachers have vaccine access and that other safety measures
are in place.
"Resuming in-person instruction when cases are so high and without
proper health and safety protocols will result in a yo-yo effect of
closures, upending the very educational stability that our students and
communities deserve," Unified Teachers Los Angeles President Cecily
Myart-Cruz said.
The county's 1.4 million students have been taking classes mostly online
since the pandemic closed their schools in March.
Pressure to reopen or expand in-person learning has been building across
the country in recent weeks as the impact of remote learning on
education and family life becomes more apparent. The debate over how and
when to safely reopen has become heated in many school districts.
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A person is vaccinated by the U.S. military at the opening of the
country's first federal and state operated community vaccination
site during the outbreak of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in
Los Angeles, California, U.S., February 16, 2021. REUTERS/Mike Blake
It has also sparked intense labor disputes between teachers unions
and districts in major cities like Chicago and Philadelphia over
mitigation protocols and vaccines.
President Joe Biden on Tuesday addressed the issue of schools
reopening during a Milwaukee townhall meeting with voters.
After a parent and a teacher asked how Biden would ensure that
schools could open safely amid the pandemic, the Democratic
president said he expected "most" elementary and middle schools to
have in-person classes five days a week by the end of his first 100
days in office.
He also said he believed teachers should be moved closer to the
front of the line for inoculation.
"I think that we should be vaccinating teachers - we should move
them up in the hierarchy," Biden said, although he noted that
states, not the federal government, have the authority to decide how
to prioritize vaccinations.
L.A. County Department of Public Health Director Barbara Ferrer said
teachers could start getting COVID-19 vaccinations beginning March 1
even as the county faces a significant limit on its supply of
vaccine.
In addition to vaccine availability, school districts should make
sure to have psychologists and social workers on hand to help
students who have been traumatized by the events of the past year,
said David Goldberg, a Los Angeles elementary school teacher who is
vice president of the California Teachers Association.
Another issue is the heavy workload on teachers as they try to
juggle in-person and online instruction, said English teacher Angela
Stegall, who is president of the Marysville Unified Teachers
Association in Northern California.
(Reporting by Brendan O'Brien in Chicago and Sharon Bernstein in
Sacramento, California; Editing by Richard Chang and Christopher
Cushing)
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