The Mercury News

San Jose teachers will be in classroom

District, union agreement sends 1,600 back to campuses Aug. 12 — though students will be home

- By Maggie Angst mangst@bayareanew­sgroup.com

Despite acknowledg­ing the unknown longterm effects of COVID-19, the San Jose Unified School District is forcing most of its teachers back into the classroom next week for the start of the upcoming school year.

Under a new agreement reached between the district and the San Jose Teachers Associatio­n, nearly 1,600 teachers will head back onto campus for the first day of school on Aug. 12. But unlike most years, they’ll be teaching their lessons in an empty classroom to students on the other side of a computer screen — without being given the choice to work from home.

A few other Bay Area districts — including Palo Alto Unified and Santa

Clara Unified — have considered such a move, as did Los

Angeles Unified School District, but San Jose Unified appears to be alone in going through with it.

The California Teachers Associatio­n, which has been lobbying to keep teachers out of classrooms until it’s safe, said some other districts and teachers unions across the state are still negotiatin­g the issue, however.

While record numbers of California­ns are getting infected and hospitaliz­ed from COVID-19, San Jose Unified teachers feel like the district is caving in to political pressure from parents and knowingly putting teachers in harm’s way.

“It screams disrespect,” said Jodi Disario, a drama and English teacher at Willow Glen High School with underlying health conditions. “We work very hard to do what’s best for our students, and we don’t feel like someone is working very hard to do what’s best for us.”

And although he didn’t single out San Jose Unified, Gov. Gavin Newsom made it clear Monday when giving a daily update on the coronaviru­s pandemic that he doesn’t believe teachers should be forced back into their class

rooms.

In response to a reporter’s question, Newsom said, “I don’t believe anyone should be forced to put their life and health at risk. Period. Full stop.

“If people feel their lives are being put at risk and their health is being put at risk, it is incumbent on us to call that out.”

San Jose Unified leaders say that they are working to make accommodat­ions for teachers and staff who have medical, child care or family needs. But many teachers say that’s not actually the case.

A high school teacher with a newborn and 2-yearold said she found out Monday

that her request to work from home had been rejected. The teacher, who asked not to be named out of concern of retaliatio­n, is struggling to find child care for her two children, but the district said that was not an adequate reason to allow her to work from home.

Instead, the district effectivel­y told her she could either show up in person or take a leave of absence for up to 12 weeks and lose a portion of her pay. Anything longer than 12 weeks would be unpaid.

The district is allowing teachers to bring their preschool through high schoolage children with them to their classrooms, but this teacher’s children are too young.

“We feel like our district does not trust us to be profession­al,”

the teacher said. “And it seems like the district’s decisions are being pushed largely by parents putting pressure on administra­tors or the school board — not taking into account the needs and feeling of teachers.”

Particular­ly galling for some current and former San Jose Unified educators and parents was a recent post made on the San Jose Unified Facebook page.

In the Sunday morning post, the district wrote, “We do not know the longterm health problems that could come from getting COVID-19. We do not know because this is a new virus. Do not be foolish. COVID is playing to win.”

About 200 people commented on the post — nearly all of whom ridiculed the district for forcing

teachers back into the classroom and thus exposing them to other people potentiall­y carrying the virus while acknowledg­ing the unknown long-term health effects of COVID-19.

“Forcing teachers to come to school and bring their children with them is risking unnecessar­y exposure. This is foolish and tone-deaf,” one person commented.

“Shame on your district! You acknowledg­e the sheer magnitude of the power of the virus while sending faculty and staff with children in tow marching to their death,” another wrote.

San Jose Unified Deputy Superinten­dent Stephen McMahon said the district’s intention in bringing teachers back is to provide the “best quality instructio­n possible” by having technology

and support readily available for them.

“We want to make sure we do start with the highest possible delivery system for instructio­n, which is the classroom,” McMahon explained at a recent school board meeting. “The tools are going to be there, the Wi-Fi system is going to be tested, and we can provide immediate support because we know where you’re at.

“There are a lot of strategic advantages to being at your work location.”

McMahon said the district is working tirelessly to ensure safe working conditions for its staff, including social distancing requiremen­ts, individual classroom assignment­s and routine cleaning of common areas and high-touch surfaces such as door handles and printers.

But many teachers are still fearful of sharing common areas and inevitably increasing their chances of infection — some pointing to the example of top Santa Clara Unified educators being quarantine­d after a 45-person meeting last month where one person tested positive for the virus.

Patrick Bernhardt, president of the San Jose Teachers Associatio­n, said the union leaders sought greater flexibilit­y around the ability of teachers and staff members to work from home but inevitably were unsuccessf­ul.

“I don’t think parents care where teachers are teaching from so long as they’re doing it well,” Bernhardt said. “But the district felt very strongly that teachers should be in the classroom.”

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