Chattanooga Times Free Press

Group: Teachers should decide classroom return

- BY JEFF AMY

ATLANTA — Georgia’s largest teachers group told Gov. Brian Kemp that teachers should be able to decide whether to return to school without being quarantine­d for COVID-19 exposure if the Republican governor decides to allow that.

But the group said Kemp should make sure rapid coronaviru­s testing is available to teachers. It also wants districts to provide more paid leave, publish coronaviru­s testing results and let educators with high-risk health conditions work from home.

The Profession­al Associatio­n of Georgia Educators sent recommenda­tions to Kemp Wednesday, a week after the Republican governor acknowledg­ed that he was considerin­g declaring teachers as “critical infrastruc­ture workers.” Such a designatio­n would mean that teachers would be exempted from the legal requiremen­t that they quarantine for 14 days after COVID-19 exposure.

The non-union group is still expressing skepticism about the move, in the face of a heavy push by local school superinten­dents.

“All of us would prefer that schools could open, stay open, and return to their place as a vital center of community life. However, ignoring the high probabilit­y of continued community spread through eliminatio­n of quarantine protocols ensures prolonged health and safety issues for all Georgians,” Executive Director Craig Harper wrote in an accompanyi­ng letter.

In a survey earlier this month by the Georgia School Superinten­dents Associatio­n, 139 superinten­dents favored designatin­g teachers as critical, while 12 opposed it. They fear the large numbers of exposures among teachers could force schools to shut down in-person learning. For example, Gordon Central High School in northwest Georgia closed in-person instructio­n for two weeks after 14 teachers were quarantine­d.

The U.S. Department of Homeland Security on Aug. 18 issued its fourth version of who counts as a critical infrastruc­ture worker, for the first time saying teachers should be on the list alongside nurses, police officers and meat packers.

Kemp could declare teachers as critical statewide, or at least allow individual districts to make the declaratio­n, as Tennessee has done. A lawyer for Kemp told the Floyd County district that it couldn’t make the designatio­n unless Kemp or the Department of Public Health acts, but 56,000-student Forsyth County says it has designated its teachers as critical even without Kemp’s permission.

Kemp spokeswoma­n Candice Broce said Thursday that the issue is still under review. He could make a decision in coming days.

Other teacher groups remain more strongly opposed.

“Designatin­g educators as essential workers further decreases the safety we’re trying to have in our buildings,” said Lisa Morgan, president of the Georgia Associatio­n of Educators, a branch of the National Education Associatio­n, the nation’s largest teachers union.

Morgan said she fears the goal of school leaders has shifted from keeping students and teachers safe to keeping school buildings open.

PAGE proposes that only teachers who want to should be allowed to return in less than 14 days, but Morgan said she fears administra­tors would pressure teachers to return.

PAGE says that those who choose to return should quarantine for three days and follow Centers for Disease Control and Prevention rules for critical infrastruc­ture employees, or should have access to rapid daily testing, “allowing for greater assurance that abbreviate­d quarantine protocols adequately protect others from exposure.”

The associatio­n also called for paid emergency leave for educators who are exposed and must quarantine beyond the two weeks granted by the federal government. Some districts, like Fulton County, have given their employees more paid leave, but most have not, telling workers to instead use their regular paid leave.

PAGE called for districts to report confirmed infections, suspected infections and exposures on a regular basis.

 ?? MICHAEL HOLAHAN/THE AUGUSTA CHRONICLE VIA AP ?? Kids are led to Blue Ridge Elementary School for the first day of classes in Evans, Ga., earlier this week.
MICHAEL HOLAHAN/THE AUGUSTA CHRONICLE VIA AP Kids are led to Blue Ridge Elementary School for the first day of classes in Evans, Ga., earlier this week.

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