Florida
teachers on edge as mask war, COVID surge mark first weeks of school
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[September 08, 2021]
By Gabriella Borter
HOMESTEAD, Fla. (Reuters) -American
Federation of Teachers President Randi Weingarten crouched to sit at a
first-graders’ table in a Florida school, chatting with masked
6-year-olds about books and their former kindergarten teacher, Mrs.
Smith.
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Lillian Smith, a local union steward who taught at William A.
Chapman Elementary in Miami-Dade County for more than 30 years, died
last month of COVID-19. At least four Miami-Dade County teachers or
staff have died from COVID so far this school year, as cases and
hospitalizations in Florida have soared.
Weingarten, in Miami on Friday as part of a U.S. tour to support
COVID-safe back-to-school measures like masking, told Reuters that
Florida is "a place where you have a governor who is more concerned
about his political aspirations than the safety and the wellbeing of
the people he was elected to serve."
Republican Governor Ron DeSantis in July issued an executive order
barring school mask mandates. DeSantis has said parents should
decide if their children wear masks. The governor's spokesperson
said in a statement that DeSantis was committed to safely reopening
schools without mask mandates and in turn accused Weingarten of
acting on political motivations.
Parents in Florida and across the United States have clashed with
school and health officials in what has become a politicized tussle
over COVID precautions.
Miami-Dade is among several districts that imposed mask requirements
in defiance of DeSantis' order. This week, the state Department of
Education withheld funding from two of those districts, though a
state judge ruled last week that the state does not have the
authority to ban mandates.
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Two small districts that did
not require masks have had to shut down because
of soaring COVID cases. With staff members sick
or quarantined, bus driver and teacher shortages
have led to overcrowding on buses and larger
class sizes, making social distancing harder,
Florida Education Association President Andrew
Spar said. "Districts are just
trying to do the best they can, but it’s challenging when we’re not
getting the support from the state,” Spar said.
Valda McKinney, a local teachers' union organizer at Chapman, said
the loss of her friend Lillian Smith - who according to Weingarten
and local news reports had not been vaccinated - made COVID-19 feel
more threatening.
"Teachers are anxious," McKinney said.
In the first-grade classroom on Friday, national union leader
Weingarten handed out new books.
“This is our honoring Mrs. Smith,” Weingarten said. “One of the
things she wanted more than anything else was for all of you to
succeed.”
(Reporting by Gabriella Borter; Editing by Donna Bryson, Leslie
Adler and Grant McCool)
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