Los Angeles Times

Back to school?

L.A. Unified plan hinges on immunizing 25,000 workers.

- By Howard Blume

Los Angeles schools Supt. Austin Beutner on Tuesday presented a plan to the school board for reopening campuses that includes the full period needed for employees to be vaccinated against COVID-19, delaying the return of elementary students to early April at best.

School officials repeatedly targeted April 9 for a campus reopening date, but Beutner described the date as an estimate, saying that the crucial issue is access to vaccines for the 25,000 employees needed for the operation of elementary schools serving 250,000 students in the nation’s second-largest school system.

He discussed no timetable for the return of students in middle and high schools.

Beutner said that with sufficient doses, the district and its partners could provide inoculatio­ns for 10,000 people a day starting next week.

“In one week we can vaccinate everybody we need to open elementary schools, and we can meet April 9,” the schools chief told the Board of Education. “If we get 2,000 doses a week, we won’t meet April 9 because we will not have vaccinated sufficient staff to be able to properly staff schools.”

“The whole team needs to be vaccinated,” he said.

Although schedules for a staggered, part-time return are still being worked out, plans under considerat­ion would give parents a choice to keep their children on fully remote learning.

Reopening was not before the board for a vote — and members voiced no objections to Beutner’s characteri­zation of the situation. Board member Monica Garcia asked staffers to make it clear to the public that the district was not at fault for any delay in vaccinatio­ns and that the allocation of doses depends on county and state officials.

Board members Jackie Goldberg and Kelley Gonez said they supported a cautious approach to reopening because the pandemic has caused great harm in communitie­s they represent — in Southeast L.A. County and the Pacoima area — and infection rates far exceed the county average.

Beutner made his case for vaccines as the United Teachers Los Angeles union is scheduling an internal vote for next week on whether its members would refuse to return to campus without maximum immunity — which requires five to six weeks after the first of two shots. UTLA represents more than 30,000 teachers, nurses, librarians and counselors.

Under California regulation­s, vaccines are not a preconditi­on for a return to work by so-called essential workers — which include teachers. And both the Biden administra­tion and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention have stipulated that campuses can be operated safely without vaccinated employees — provided that safety measures are strictly followed.

That’s also the position of Gov. Gavin Newsom, who said a vaccine requiremen­t would probably end hopes for in-person schooling this spring in many places.

However, teachers in some districts, such as San Francisco and San Diego, are winning this concession.

The San Diego Unified School District, the state’s second-largest, on Tuesday announced a vaccinatio­n effort under which all “teachers who wish to be vaccinated have had the opportunit­y to do so,” according to a release. In addition to waiting for full immunity, the planned April 12 reopening requires San Diego County to return to the “red tier,” which is a one-level improvemen­t over “purple,” which signifies widespread community transmissi­on.

“From the start of this crisis, we have remained committed to reopening when it was safe and responsibl­e to do so,” said San Diego Unified Board President Richard Barrera. “Full vaccinatio­ns for educators are part of that safety plan.”

Long Beach Unified, the second-largest district in L.A. County, has been working with the health department for the City of Long Beach in a vaccinatio­n program for school staff that began in late January.

L.A. Unified falls within the jurisdicti­on of the L.A. County Department of Public Health, which will officially open up vaccines to school staff on March 1. That’s also the day that Newsom has pledged to begin allotting 10% of immunizati­ons for the education sector. However, the share going to L.A. County could be as small initially as 10,000 doses a week; county officials estimate there are about 691,000 school staff and child-care workers eligible for this set-aside.

Although school officials want more, the county will provide 3,000 doses this week to inoculate employees 65 and older and those working at the district’s coronaviru­s testing or vaccinatio­n sites.

In some areas, momentum among parents to push for reopening is building, although many parents also are wary of returning. L.A. Unified intends to survey families about their preference­s in the next two weeks or so.

 ?? Mel Melcon Los Angeles Times ?? FIFTH-GRADE teacher Gladys Alvarez, who works at Manchester Avenue Elementary School in South Los Angeles, talks to her students during a virtual meet-and-greet session in her classroom in August.
Mel Melcon Los Angeles Times FIFTH-GRADE teacher Gladys Alvarez, who works at Manchester Avenue Elementary School in South Los Angeles, talks to her students during a virtual meet-and-greet session in her classroom in August.

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