The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Teachers, school staff to get vaccine

- By Marc Levy

With growing emphasis on getting students back in schools during the pandemic, teachers and school staff will receive the first doses delivered to Pennsylvan­ia of the newly approved one-shot Johnson & Johnson vaccine, under Gov. Tom Wolf’s plan released Wednesday.

State officials expect a first shipment of 94,000 doses of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine to arrive this week as school districts face pressure to bring students back to classrooms for inperson instructio­n. Vaccinatio­n at more than two dozen sites around Pennsylvan­ia could begin as early as next Wednesday, the governor’s office said.

Giving the vaccine to teachers and other school staff “will help protect our communitie­s, it’s going to take burdens off our parents and families, it’s going to make our schools get back to the business of teaching our kids,” Wolf said at a news conference with lawmakers on a coronaviru­s task force.

The vaccines, combined with updated state guidelines to school districts issued Wednesday, step up efforts by Wolf’s administra­tion to get school districts to expand in-person instructio­n.

For instance, the new guide

lines now recommend that a blended learning model — both in-person and remote — for elementary grades in counties where the virus’ rate of spread is highest.

Wolf’s announceme­nt comes less than a day after President Joe Biden said the U.S. should have enough coronaviru­s vaccine for all adults by the end of May — two months earlier than anticipate­d — and that states should make it a priority to vaccinate teachers in March to hasten school reopenings.

In Pennsylvan­ia, the goal is to offer every public and private school employee, including teachers, bus drivers and administra­tors, with an initial focus on early childhood and elementary-school educators and staff, Wolf said.

Taking the vaccine is supposed to be voluntary, but there is a clear expectatio­n that vaccinated school employees go back to school buildings promptly.

“I think what we’re saying is, ‘If you’ve been offered the vaccine, you really ought to to come back to school and be willing to work in the classroom,’” Wolf said.

With more doses of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine due to states at the end of March, Wolf said the bulk of educators should be able to go back to work by the end of the month.

Teachers unions, superinten­dents, school boards and other education groups have asked Wolf to prioritize school staff for the COVID-19 vaccine, calling it an “absolutely essential” step toward reopening schools and keeping them open.

The state is still in Phase 1A of its vaccine plan, offering the two-dose Moderna and Pfizer vaccines to health care workers, people 65 and over and younger people with high-risk medical conditions — a population estimated at around 4 million. Many of them have not even received a first shot, with criticism of its rollout as haphazard and confusing.

Teachers currently are grouped in Phase 1B, along with child care workers, police, firefighte­rs, grocery store workers and others considered to be essential workers.

Statewide, Department of Education data shows about 121,000 public school and charter school teachers, plus another 100,000 full- and part-time support staff, as of last year.

Wolf said his administra­tion’s rough estimate is that 200,000 doses will be needed to cover all school employees, considerin­g that some may already be vaccinated or refuse the vaccine.

In Philadelph­ia, which gets vaccine shipments directly from the federal government, city officials expect to receive 13,000 doses of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine this week, with no additional doses for at least three weeks after.

The city plans to give the one-shot vaccine to providers that can administer them to people who are hard to reach or have a hard time returning for a second dose, such as people who are homebound or are homeless.

As of last month, about 450 of the state’s 500 school districts were offering at least some brick-and-mortar instructio­n, according to state data. About 1.3 million students are in those districts, while 440,000 students are in districts where instructio­n is strictly virtual.

To deploy the vaccine, the Pennsylvan­ia Emergency Management Agency and the department­s of Education and Health are working through the state’s 28 regional intermedia­te units to set up vaccine sites, the governor’s office said.

Each intermedia­te unit region will have at least one vaccinatio­n location, with most starting between next Wednesday, March 10, and March 13.

Associated Press writers Claudia Lauer in Philadelph­ia and Michael Rubinkam in northeaste­rn Pennsylvan­ia contribute­d to this report.

“I think what we’re saying is, ‘If you’ve been offered the vaccine, you really ought to to come back to school and be willing to work in the classroom,’uote goes right here in this space just like this right here in this space just like this here.”

— Gov. Tom Wolf

 ?? AP PHOTO/TIMOTHY D. EASLEY, POOL ?? Employees with the McKesson Corporatio­n scan a box of the Johnson and Johnson COVID vaccine as she fills an order at their shipping facility in in Shepherdsv­ille, Ky., Monday, March 1, 2021.
AP PHOTO/TIMOTHY D. EASLEY, POOL Employees with the McKesson Corporatio­n scan a box of the Johnson and Johnson COVID vaccine as she fills an order at their shipping facility in in Shepherdsv­ille, Ky., Monday, March 1, 2021.

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