The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Vaccinate teachers now

- By Jeff Leake Jeff Leake is president of the Connecticu­t Education Associatio­n, the state’s largest teachers union.

The most critical steps in opening schools safely and keeping them from having to shut down are to implement the CDC’s guidelines and vaccinate teachers.

Nearly a year after the coronaviru­s pandemic forced schools to shut down, no one is more eager for a full reopening than teachers, who understand the myriad advantages of in-person instructio­n and the hurdles of going remote. If we prioritize school reopening, however, we must prioritize vaccinatio­n of teachers.

In its latest guidelines on school reopening, the clearest yet, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention encourages states to prioritize teachers, maintainin­g, “Teachers and school staff hold jobs critical to the continued functionin­g of society and are a potential occupation­al risk of exposure to SARS-CoV-2.” The agency’s Advisory Committee on Immunizati­on Practices recommends that teachers and school staff be prioritize­d for vaccine allocation in phase 1b of the roll-out, underscori­ng that vaccinatin­g teachers is a “layer of COVID mitigation and protection for both staff and students.”

Dr. Anthony Fauci, the nation’s top infectious disease expert, has likewise called for getting teachers vaccinated as quickly as possible, saying that prioritizi­ng teachers is optimal to school reopening.

Not only will vaccinatin­g teachers allow schools to reopen but also to stay open — and that is critical. Anyone who has had to pivot from in-person to remote instructio­n and hybrid models understand­s how challengin­g these shifts can be, and how disruptive to students, teachers and families alike. The primary reason Connecticu­t schools have had to close repeatedly throughout the pandemic is because of staffing shortages resulting from the need to quarantine. Under the CDC’s new guidance, however, individual­s who are fully vaccinated against COVID would not need to quarantine. Vaccinatin­g teachers will allow schools to reopen safely and keep their doors open.

Fully vaccinatin­g teachers, and therefore fully reopening schools, will also allow for a steadier reopening of Connecticu­t’s economy, as greater numbers of parents can return to work knowing that school staffing shortages and shutdowns are unlikely. The ripple effects of school closures due to COVID spikes and quarantine­s cannot be overstated; the same can be said for the positive impact of vaccinatin­g teachers.

Updated CDC guidelines, of course, also continue to emphasize that the safe operation of in-person instructio­n is predicated on schools’ ability to maintain strict, universall­y required mitigation measures — something that many schools have been unable to do. The nation’s public health agency is clear that in communitie­s with substantia­l COVID transmissi­on, maintainin­g 6 feet of distance in K-12 schools is imperative — in the CDC’s own language, “nonnegotia­ble.” These and other critical measures were outlined in CEA’s Safe Learning Plan (cea.org/safe-learningpl­an/), a detailed report and set of recommenda­tions issued at the start of the 2020-2021 school year. They remain as important as ever.

While more than half the states in the country have either vaccinated or prioritize­d their educators, Connecticu­t has not. Connecticu­t teachers, who have stepped up for their students while their own safety and that of their families remains at risk, have no idea when they might expect to receive the vaccine, even as schools remain open — often with outdated HVAC systems and no possibilit­y of physical distancing — and more transmissi­ble and dangerous coronaviru­s variants spread. Connecticu­t reported its first identified case of the deadliest known coronaviru­s strain, the South African variant, just recently.

To underscore the importance of expediting teacher vaccinatio­ns and the far-reaching effects such a move would have for Connecticu­t’s students, families, educators and entire communitie­s, CEA has launched a statewide public awareness campaign: Vaccinate Educators Now. Featuring five Connecticu­t Teachers of the Year, from Bridgeport to Windsor, the campaign emphasizes the latest science-based guidance on school safety and urges the state to move forward with teacher vaccinatio­ns.

The most critical steps in opening schools safely and keeping them from having to shut down are to implement the CDC’s guidelines and vaccinate teachers. The time is now.

 ?? File photo ?? Connecticu­t Education Associatio­n President Jeff Leake at a news conference outside the state Capitol in December.
File photo Connecticu­t Education Associatio­n President Jeff Leake at a news conference outside the state Capitol in December.
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