COVID-19 leave for vaccinated teachers clears General Assembly
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[April 01, 2022]
By PETER HANCOCK
Capitol News Illinois
phancock@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – A bill that allows teachers
and other school and university employees or contractors who are fully
vaccinated to take paid administrative leave if they have to miss work
due to coronavirus-related issues cleared the Illinois Senate Thursday
and will soon be sent to Gov. JB Pritzker.
House Bill 1167, by Rep. Janet Yang Rohr, D-Naperville, and Senate
President Don Harmon, D-Oak Park, would guarantee full pay for any day
that a fully-vaccinated school employee misses if they are required to
stay home because they have a confirmed or probable case of COVID-19.
It also applies if the employee is required to stay home because they
have been in close contact with a person confirmed to have COVID-19, to
care for a child with COVID-19, or if the building in which they work is
forced to close due to a COVID-19 outbreak.
It also applies to public university and community college personnel.
The bill, which would be retroactive to the beginning of the 2021-2022
school year, defines “fully vaccinated” as having received two doses of
the Pfizer or Moderna vaccines or one dose of the Johnson & Johnson
vaccine at least two weeks before being forced to miss work.
The bill is similar to one lawmakers passed during the fall veto session
last year, HB2778, except that the earlier bill did not include a
vaccination requirement. Pritzker vetoed that bill while at the same
time announcing he had negotiated a compromise package with the state’s
two major teachers unions, school districts, community colleges and
universities that included a vaccine requirement.
“Vaccines are a vital tool in preventing the deadly effects of Covid-19,
and those who take the steps to be fully vaccinated against this virus
are doing their part to keep everyone safe,” Pritzker said in his veto
message on Jan. 24. “They deserve to be able to take the time they need
to respond to the ongoing devastating impacts the Covid-19 pandemic
continues to have on them and their families.”
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Senate President Don Harmon urges passage of a bill
providing school employees who are fully vaccinated paid
administrative leave if they have to miss work due to
COVID-19-related issues. (Credit: Blueroomstream.com)
But while the earlier bill passed the General Assembly nearly
unanimously – 113-0 in the House; 53-1 in the Senate – the inclusion of
a vaccine requirement caused lawmakers to split along party lines.
Republicans argued that the new bill amounts to a kind of vaccine
mandate for school employees because it treats people who are otherwise
equally situated, differently, based on their vaccination status.
Senate Minority Leader Dan McConchie, R-Hawthorn Woods, pointed to a
hypothetical example of two teachers, one vaccinated and one not, who
have to stay home to take care of a sick child. He said one of those
would receive paid leave to do so but the other would not.
“I just don’t think it’s the place of the General Assembly to be getting
involved in this in which we’re dividing up people under the same
collective bargaining agreement,” he said.
Harmon, however, said the bill does not mandate that any school employee
be vaccinated, and he compared the extra benefit vaccinated employees
would receive to the extra pay some teachers receive if they pursue an
advanced degree.
He also said he believed people who object to being vaccinated for
religious or medical reasons would be exempted under federal law.
“If you are taking an affirmative step to be better prepared to be in
the classroom or in the school, you have an enhanced benefit,” he said.
The bill passed the Senate 32-18. It passed the House on March 1, 70-28.
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news
service covering state government and distributed to more than 400
newspapers statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois Press
Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation.
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