Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Miami school banned vaccinated teachers from contact with students

Citing false claims private academy discourage­d shots

- By Patricia Mazzei

A private school in the fashionabl­e Design District of Miami sent its faculty and staff a letter last week about getting vaccinated against COVID-19. But unlike institutio­ns that have encouraged and even facilitate­d vaccinatio­n for teachers, the school, Centner Academy, did the opposite: One of its co-founders, Leila Centner, informed employees “with a very heavy heart” that if they chose to get a shot, they would have to stay away from students.

In an example of how misinforma­tion threatens the nation’s effort to vaccinate enough Americans to get the coronaviru­s under control, Leila Centner, who has frequently shared anti-vaccine posts on Facebook, claimed in the letter that “reports have surfaced recently of non-vaccinated people being negatively impacted by interactin­g with people who have been vaccinated.”

“Even among our own population, we have at least three women with menstrual cycles impacted after having spent time with a vaccinated person,” she wrote, repeating a false claim that vaccinated people can somehow pass the vaccine to others and thereby affect their reproducti­ve systems. (They can do neither.)

In the letter, Centner gave employees three options:

— Inform the school if they had already been vaccinated, so they could be kept physically distanced from students;

— Let the school know if they get the vaccine before the end of the school year, “as we cannot allow recently vaccinated people to be near our students until more informatio­n is known”;

— Wait until the school year is over to get vaccinated.

Teachers who get the vaccine over the summer will not be allowed to return, the letter said, until clinical trials on the vaccine are completed, and then only “if a position is still available at that time” — effectivel­y making teachers’ employment contingent on avoiding the vaccine.

Centner required the faculty and staff to fill out a “confidenti­al” form revealing whether they had received a vaccine — and if so, which one and how many doses — or planned to get vaccinated. The form requires employees to “acknowledg­e the School will take legal measures needed to protect the students if it is determined that I have not answered these questions accurately.”

Centner directed questions about the matter to her publicist, who said in a statement that the school’s top priority throughout the pandemic has been to keep students safe. The statement repeated false claims that vaccinated people “may be transmitti­ng something from their bodies” leading to adverse reproducti­ve issues among women.

“We are not 100% sure the COVID injections are safe and there are too many unknown variables for us to feel comfortabl­e at this current time,” the statement said.

The Food and Drug Administra­tion, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the World Health Organizati­on and many other authoritie­s have concluded that the coronaviru­s vaccines now in emergency use in the United States are safe and effective.

The Centner Academy opened in 2019 for students in prekinderg­arten through eighth grade, promoting itself as a “happiness school” focused on children’s mindfulnes­s and emotional intelligen­ce. The school prominentl­y advertises on its website support for “medical freedom from mandated vaccines.”

Centner founded the school with her husband, David Centner, a technology and electronic highway tolling entreprene­ur. Each has donated heavily to the Republican Party and Donald Trump’s reelection campaign, while giving much smaller sums to local Democrats.

In February, the Centners welcomed a special guest to speak to students: Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the prominent anti-vaccine activist. (Kennedy was suspended from Instagram a few days later for promoting COVID19 vaccine misinforma­tion.) This month, the school hosted a Zoom talk with Dr. Lawrence Palevsky, a New York pediatrici­an frequently cited by anti-vaccinatio­n activists.

 ?? MATT ROURKE/AP ?? A health worker prepares a dose of the Johnson & Johnson COVID-19 vaccine at a site in Philadelph­ia.
MATT ROURKE/AP A health worker prepares a dose of the Johnson & Johnson COVID-19 vaccine at a site in Philadelph­ia.

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