Sunderland Echo

Call to put teachers on C-19 priority list

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More than 2,000 teachers in Sunderland could jump up the priority list for the coronaviru­s vaccine if the Government acts on union calls.

By the time schools reopen - mid-February at least – Prime Minister Boris Johnson says that the top four priority groups – care home residents and staff, frontline health and care workers, vulnerable individual­s, and everyone over 70 – should have received their injections.

Teachers and other school staff are not currently prioritise­d in the vaccine programme – but unions claim they should be.

The School Workforce Census shows 2,010 teachers in Sunderland were aged below 50 in 2019 – 85% of the 2,374 teachers whose age was listed in the census, with the largest proportion (34%) in the 30 to 39 age group.

Putting all school staff on the priority list would see more than 400,000 teachers bumped up the queue nationally, the figures suggest.

Paul White man, general secretary of the NAHT school leaders' union, said the school workforce should also be prioritise­d to "help facilitate a speedy return to face-to-face education".

The NA H T, National Education Union (NEU), NASU WT teachers’ union, GMB, Unison and Unite have warned that bringing pupils back had risked fuelling the pandemic further by exposing teachers to the risk of Covid .

Mr Whiteman said: “No time should be wasted in preparing for an orderly and sustainabl­e return.”

A national petition calling for teachers, school and childcare staff to be prioritise­d for the jab had attracted more than 270,000 signatures by Tuesday afternoon.

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