Lake County Record-Bee

Teachers move to the front of the vaccine line

- By Diana Lambert

Thousands of California teachers from urban and suburban school districts who had been waiting for Covid-19 vaccinatio­ns finally began receiving their first doses last week, with those numbers expected to climb as the state takes additional steps to prioritize teachers.

Gov. Gavin Newsom tried to give teacher vaccinatio­ns a boost last week when he announced that the state would designate 10%, or 75,000, of its vaccine doses each week for school employees. The new plan starts March 1. The vaccines will be prioritize­d for school workers who are returning to classrooms.

Formerly, most of the teachers who were vaccinated worked in rural districts in counties that had quickly vaccinated people higher on the state’s priority list and moved on to school staff. But now counties with some of the largest school districts are putting shots in teachers’ arms.

In Sacramento County, almost every large school district held a shot clinic last week for school staff. San Joaquin County is vaccinatin­g more than a 1,000 school employees daily at a vaccinatio­n site, and in Alameda

County mobile vans fanned out across the county to vaccinate school staff last week.

Last week, Contra Costa County also began vaccinatin­g teachers, and Orange and San Mateo counties now offer appointmen­ts as vaccines become available. The city of San Francisco plans to begin vaccinatin­g teachers Feb. 24, and San Diego and Santa Clara counties will begin vaccinatin­g school staff in the next two weeks.

Los Angeles Unified held a single vaccinatio­n clinic for district staff Wednesday at Roybal Learning Center, but was able to inoculate only 100 people because of the vaccine shortage. District officials had expected 2,000 doses, according to the Los Angeles Times. The county is planning to officially begin vaccinatin­g school staff, including teachers, in March.

Because vaccine supplies are limited, some counties, or cities with health department­s, like the City of Berkeley, are limiting educator vaccinatio­ns to those currently working with students in-person.

“We can’t wait to have our kids back and this is one giant step toward getting them back,” said Jeremy Sinclair, 42, a counselor at Venture Academy in Stockton, after getting his first vaccine dose Friday. “I personally feel better not only for myself, but for the students I’m going to come in contact with.”

Sinclair whizzed through the vaccinatio­n clinic at the San Joaquin County Office of Education in just 6 minutes, plus the required 15-minute waiting period to ensure there are no adverse reactions. Sinclair was one of the first to be vaccinated at the clinic because he volunteere­d to help with traffic control.

Sinclair credited the office of education’s CodeStack Division for his speedy experience. The division developed a program that allows a user to download a QR code on their phone that can be scanned at various stations while going through the vaccinatio­n clinic. The QR code holds all the patient’s informatio­n, so there are fewer papers to sign or exchange. It also generates the appointmen­t for the second dose of the vaccine.

The San Joaquin County Office of Education scheduled 1,000 teachers and other school staff from district, charter and private K-12 schools for Covid-19 vaccinatio­ns, which they received Friday. An additional 9,000 are scheduled for vaccinatio­ns this week and 1,300 the week of March 3. About 50% of those who received invitation­s for the clinics scheduled appointmen­ts, said Jane Steinkamp, assistant superinten­dent of educationa­l services.

“It’s been a Herculean effort,” she said of organizing the clinics. “We do a lot of large events and have done vaccinatio­n and flu clinics, but haven’t done a vaccinatio­n clinic as a large event.”

The clinics, which Steinkamp said are the only ones in the state run by a county office of education, require 250 volunteers each day, including 80 school nurses from county schools and 40 additional nurses.

The county office of education will continue to give vaccinatio­ns if it receives more doses and there are people who want it, Steinkamp said. The county has 22,000 school employees.

The vaccine rollout for teachers and school staff has been slow. The vaccine is still in short supply, and teachers have had to compete with 8 million California­ns for limited doses in crowded Phase 1B of the state’s priority list. Phase 1B includes everyone age 65 and older, food service and agricultur­e workers, child care workers and emergency service employees.

Most counties have completed or nearly completed vaccinatin­g people in Phase 1A, which includes medical workers.

Although the state decided on the phases that make up its priority list, counties have largely decided who gets precedence within each phase. Most counties have prioritize­d people age 65 and older in Phase 1B, but others also have given precedence to emergency services workers and teachers. Even vaccinatio­n clinics within counties can have different priorities.

Vaccine supply is the biggest hurdle to getting California­ns vaccinated against Covid-19. The precarious nature of the supply chain was evident last week when several scheduled vaccinatio­n clinics were canceled because severe winter storms prevented the vaccine from being transporte­d to the state.

Teachers from four small south Sacramento County school districts were disappoint­ed when a joint vaccinatio­n clinic scheduled for Feb. 17 was canceled because of the storm that hit the East Coast. The clinic, reschedule­d for this Wednesday at Liberty Ranch High School in Galt, will provide vaccinatio­ns to 1,200 people, including school employees and members of the community.

“We can’t wait to have our kids back and this is one giant step toward getting them back. I personally feel better not only for myself, but for the students I’m going to come in contact with.”

— Jeremy Sinclair, counselor at Venture Academy in Stockton

 ?? ANDREA PRICE — SACRAMENTO STATE ?? Sacramento County teachers are among those being vaccinated at an ongoing Covid-19 vaccinatio­n clinic at Sacramento State. State Rep. Doris Matsui toured the clinic on Feb. 16.
ANDREA PRICE — SACRAMENTO STATE Sacramento County teachers are among those being vaccinated at an ongoing Covid-19 vaccinatio­n clinic at Sacramento State. State Rep. Doris Matsui toured the clinic on Feb. 16.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States