The Day

Vaccinatio­n mix-up leads some state teachers to sign up early

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Hartford (AP) — Hundreds of Connecticu­t schoolteac­hers were able to sign up for coronaviru­s vaccine appointmen­ts before they were actually eligible, due to confusion over the rollout rules, a newspaper reported Monday.

State Health Department spokespers­on Maura Fitzgerald told The Hartford Courant the issue arose after some school districts mistakenly put their entire staff rosters into a registrati­on system when the state actually had asked only for lists of school nurses. The nurses were eligible for vaccinatio­n as health care providers.

Teachers in those districts got automated emails confirming their registrati­ons.

That enabled them to make appointmen­ts to get the shots, and an unknown number did so, the newspaper said.

“A good amount” of Cromwell Public Schools’ 300 staffers have signed up for vaccinatio­n appointmen­ts, Superinten­dent Enza Macri said.

“I did not give anybody my blessing. It happened on its own, and it was an error on the system’s behalf,” Macri said, adding that “the messages are very unclear.”

Glastonbur­y Public Schools also broadly registered its staff, but Superinten­dent Alan Bookman said officials quickly realized the mistake, told ineligible staffers not to book appointmen­ts and retracted the erroneous registrati­ons.

Berlin Public Schools told all staffers by email to sign up for vaccine appointmen­ts, thinking they were allowed to do so — only to instruct the staff to cancel the appointmen­ts after recognizin­g they weren’t, Superinten­dent Brian Benigni said.

Then, in another turn, the state advised that those who have made appointmen­ts should keep them, although no one else who’s ineligible should make one.

Josh Geballe, the state’s chief operating officer, told the Courant that canceling appointmen­ts “could create issues in scheduling,” and Fitzgerald said the state’s “overarchin­g goal is: No doses go wasted.”

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