Paid COVID-19 leave for vaccinated educators signed into law
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[April 06, 2022] By
PETER HANCOCK
Capitol News Illinois
phancock@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – Public school, community
college and public university employees who are fully vaccinated against
COVID-19 are now entitled to paid administrative leave for any days they
miss this school year due to coronavirus-related issues.
Gov. JB Pritzker on Tuesday signed House Bill 1167 into law, which
provides those employees as many days off as needed to abide by public
health guidelines and mandates related to isolation and exclusion. The
law applies to any employee of public educational institutions,
including support staff and contractors.
It also applies retroactively to days missed this school year.
“It ensures that if a teacher has done their part to keep their
classroom safe for their most vulnerable students, they won't have to
worry for a second about their pay or their paid time off if they get
COVID, or if they're required to isolate, or if the school has moved to
e-learning and their work can't be done at home,” Pritzker said during a
bill signing ceremony in his Statehouse office.
Lawmakers initially passed a bill during last year’s fall veto session
that provided paid leave for any education employee who had to miss work
due to COVID-19, but Pritzker vetoed that measure in January because it
also would have applied to unvaccinated employees.
At the same time he issued that veto, however, Pritzker announced he had
reached a negotiated agreement with teachers’ unions, school districts,
colleges and universities on a bill that would include a vaccine
requirement for the benefit.
“Work in legislation is difficult. People don't always agree. There are
struggles and differences of opinion,” said Dan Montgomery, president of
the Illinois Federation of Teachers. “And we've seen around the country,
and certainly around the state, that those tensions are inflamed during
COVID. But this bill is a sign that when you have good public servants
of goodwill, who devote themselves to trying to figure out what's the
right thing to do, we can all work together and get it done and do it in
a way that is better for learning, teaching, and the kids and their
communities of the state.”
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Gov. JB Pritzker signs a bill on Tuesday entitling
public school, community college and public university employees who
are fully vaccinated against COVID-19 to receive paid administrative
leave for any days they miss this school year due to coronavirus-related
issues. (Capitol News Illinois photo by Peter Hancock)
Angela Bulger, a special education paraprofessional in O’Fallon, said
she has already missed eight school days this year due to COVID-19 –
once when she contracted the virus and again when her 7-year-old
daughter was exposed to the virus at school.
“As a new employee, I am allotted 11 sick days,” she said. “Without this
legislation, any additional days missed because of COVID would also mean
a cut in pay because I have no more earned sick days.”
The original bill passed the General Assembly in October with
near-unanimous support, but the inclusion of a vaccination requirement
to be able to receive the benefits sparked Republican opposition. They
argued that unvaccinated employees who have to stay home to care for a
sick family member would be deprived of a benefit that a vaccinated
person in the same position would receive.
But Pritzker defended the vaccine requirement as a way to encourage more
people to get vaccinated.
“What we're trying to do, of course, is to encourage people to do the
right thing to keep their students safe, to keep the rest of the school
safe, by being vaccinated. That's the whole purpose of that provision in
the law,” he said.
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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