Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

MPS to consider mandatory staff vaccines

- Rory Linnane Molly Beck of the Journal Sentinel staff contribute­d to this report.

Milwaukee Public Schools administra­tors will present possible policies in September for requiring that district staff and volunteers either be vaccinated or participat­e in weekly testing, as directed by school board members Tuesday night.

In a committee meeting Tuesday, five board members voted unanimousl­y for a resolution directing administra­tors to propose such policies. The full board will consider whether to approve a policy when presented in September.

Bob Peterson, school board president, put forward the resolution and asked administra­tors to also explore possible criteria for waivers that would exempt employees for medical or religious reasons.

Peterson cited recent vaccine mandates by major national employers, as well as local policies from organizati­ons like Summerfest and Pabst Theater Group. He noted support for teacher vaccinatio­n requiremen­ts from U.S. Education Secretary Miguel Cardona and Dr. Anthony Fauci.

“The recent upsurge in COVID-19 delta variant, and its increasing impact on children, tells us that what we are doing is still not enough,” Peterson said. “We need to have healthy teachers and staff if we’re going to keep our schools open this year.”

Gov. Tony Evers said Wednesday at a news conference on a dairy farm in rural Dodge County that he supports school district-level requiremen­ts for school staff, like officials in large school districts in other states have decided.

“Yeah I think so,” he said. “I’ve seen teaching unions and boards in New York City and L.A., Chicago, Broward County in Florida come together and said yes, our staff needs to be vaccinated. I hope those conversati­ons happen locally too.”

Chicago Public Schools announced Aug. 13 that its employees must be vaccinated, with some exceptions for medical and religious reasons. The move followed California Gov. Gavin Newsom’s announceme­nt that all schools in California would require vaccinatio­ns for staff.

The two largest teachers’ unions in the country have said they support requiring educators to get vaccinated or face regular testing. Locally, Amy Mizialko, president of the Milwaukee Teachers Education Associatio­n, said the chapter has not yet met to take a stance on the issue.

Mizialko, speaking at the committee meeting Tuesday, did note that MTEA has advocated for MPS to offer incentives for vaccinatio­n since spring — as many other districts have done with cash payments — to no avail.

“Incentiviz­ing vaccinatio­n is an immediate action to protect the students and staff of MPS,” she said. “The board and administra­tion can and should bring this item to the full board next week while MPS deliberate­s the longer term considerat­ion of a vaccine mandate.”

One person who identified as a district employee, without spelling their full name, spoke against a vaccine mandate.

“I have spiritual beliefs that I live by daily and am not led to vaccinate,” the speaker said. “I believe vaccinatio­n is a private and personal choice.”

It’s unclear how many staff and students are already vaccinated, as neither health department nor MPS officials have kept track or done surveys.

In Milwaukee County, about 50% of residents have received at least one dose of the vaccine. The numbers are higher for older adults and lower for teens. About 42% of residents ages 15-19 and 20% of those ages 10-14 have received at least their first dose, according to health department data.

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