Bills would give Illinois Public Health Department more power over all
schools
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[May 07, 2021]
By Kevin Bessler
(The Center Square) – Teachers' unions are
pushing for two bills in Springfield that would require in-person
instruction at all Illinois schools, public or private, to be contingent
on meeting requirements set by the Illinois Department of Public Health.
The measures also would have the department investigate and potentially
shut down schools for not complying with COVID-19 mitigations, instead
of local health officials managing such orders.
One bill has already passed the House, and a Senate committee has passed
a similar version.
Zach Messersmith, director of policy for the Illinois Association of
School Boards, said the part of the bill that allows for a teacher who
feels conditions are not safe at school to walk off the job is a
mistake.
“I think what we’ve heard a lot about is concern of a patchwork of one
school might be doing this or one school may be doing that, and now we
are going to have thousands of teachers that are going to be determining
the abnormally dangerous conditions for themselves,” Messersmith said.
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IDPH and the Illinois State Board of Education and 87
other parties have filed notice they oppose the legislation. Four
parties publicly showed support, including the Illinois Education
Association.
Sean Denny from the Illinois Education Association said the intent
of the legislation is to streamline COVID-19 protocols and the
enforcement of them.
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“Very loosey-goosey approaches across the state and
no one ever really knew exactly what they were supposed to be
doing,” Denney said. “Some districts took it seriously and did well
and other ones not so much.”
State Sen. Jason Barickman countered, saying the schools in his
district did just fine on their own.
“I had a vast majority who created their own procedures and were
able to navigate COVID throughout the year successfully while
providing in-person learning,” Barickman said.
Private school leaders have also expressed alarm at the legislation,
noting the bill appears to replace local decision-making by the IDPH.
In June 2020, the Illinois State Board of Education and IDPH jointly
developed guidance for all Illinois schools to prepare their
facilities and adjust their operating procedures for in-person
instruction during the pandemic. The guidelines included face masks,
physical distancing and cleaning protocols.
Teachers union leaders in Illinois have resisted calls to resume
in-person learning over the course of this school year, including
the largest union in Chicago. The unions have said they want to make
sure school is safe for everyone. |