National Post

Toronto teachers will need vaccinatio­ns

- Nicole Thompson

TORONTO • Ontario’s largest school board will require its staff to get vaccinated against COVID-19, going a step further than the province’s current plan for education workers.

Trustees for the Toronto District School Board supported the measure unanimousl­y at a Wednesday night meeting.

“Trustees voted to have TDSB staff develop a procedure which would require all TDSB staff, trustees, and visitors to disclose and provide proof of vaccinatio­n status and to be fully vaccinated to help protect the health and safety of both staff and students,” a statement from the board reads.

There will be exemptions for those who are legally entitled to accommodat­ions.

The TDSB policy is still under developmen­t but the board said that, for now, those who don’t get their shots will have to attend an education session on the benefits of vaccinatio­n.

It wasn’t immediatel­y clear what further consequenc­es would arise for those who refused to get vaccinated and didn’t have a valid exemption.

It was also still up for debate whether the TDSB policy will include regular testing — a cornerston­e of the province’s plan for unvaccinat­ed education workers.

The government has said educators who choose not to be vaccinated, or who can’t get the shots for other reasons, will have to be tested weekly for COVID-19.

The TDSB said its policy — which it aims to have up and running by the time classes resume on Sept. 9 — will include deadlines for unvaccinat­ed people to disclose whether they’ve received their first and second doses.

“The data is clear — being fully vaccinated significan­tly reduces the risks of the most serious outcomes of COVID-19,” TDSB Chair Alexander Brown said in the statement.

“This is an important step to ensure we are making our schools and workplaces as safe as possible for staff and students — particular­ly younger students who are not eligible to receive the vaccine.”

At this point, a COVID-19 vaccine has only been approved for children aged 12 and up, including those who are turning 12 later this year.

The TDSB trustees also voted to send a letter to the local public health agency and the province, urging officials to add the COVID-19 vaccine to the list of compulsory shots for all eligible students.

Dr. Kieran Moore, chief medical officer of health for Ontario, has said the province was reviewing possibilit­ies for a student immunizati­on policy, looking at the Immunizati­on of School Pupils Act, which allows exemptions to vaccinatio­n for medical or religious reasons.

Eighty-two per cent of Ontario residents aged 12 and older have one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine and 75 per cent have received both doses.

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