Los Angeles Times

STATE WILL RESERVE 10% OF VACCINE SUPPLY FOR TEACHERS

The move, to start March 1, will hasten school reopenings, Gov. Newsom said.

- By John Myers and Taryn Luna

SACRAMENTO — Gov. Gavin Newsom announced Friday that state officials will set aside 10% of California’s weekly allotment of COVID-19 vaccine doses for educators starting next month, in an effort to jumpstart the process of reopening more public school campuses as pandemic conditions improve in communitie­s across the state.

The announceme­nt, made during a visit to an Oakland vaccinatio­n clinic, marked a swift turn of events after school reopening negotiatio­ns between Newsom and state lawmakers stalled, in part over the governor’s reluctance to promise vaccinatio­ns to teachers and other school employees. Though a number of issues over how to resume in-person instructio­n remain unresolved, none has been more contentiou­s than how to prioritize educators within the state’s queue for immunizati­ons.

“It must be done much sooner than the current path that we’re on,” Newsom said Friday about reopening schools. “We believe this will

help advance that cause.”

The governor said the program will begin March 1. Based on current allocation­s from the federal government, the state will reserve about 75,000 doses of COVID-19 vaccine for school employees.

Newsom did not say whether teachers and other staff members should expect to receive the full treatment — the two injections required by current vaccines — before returning to campuses or should expect to be vaccinated soon after schools open.

Informatio­n sent to county public health department­s Friday said Blue Shield of California, in its new role as the state’s COVID-19 vaccine administra­tor, will prioritize appointmen­ts each week for educators — a group that includes teachers, support staff, child-care providers and a broad array of affiliated jobs. Higher-education employees will also be considered eligible for priority vaccinatio­ns, according to the state guidelines.

“Over a four-week period, that’s about 300,000 vaccinatio­ns prioritize­d to our workforce in order to get our schools reopened and support our child-care workers,” Newsom said.

But to what extent the governor’s effort will help bring students back to school this spring is unclear.

The policy is likely to focus first on vaccine access for employees at public and private schools that are already open.

Using state data and through its own survey of schools, the nonpartisa­n

Public Policy Institute of California reported Thursday that more than half of school districts in the state are open for some level of inperson instructio­n.

The governor’s surprise announceme­nt left unclear the fate of legislatio­n introduced Thursday by Democratic lawmakers. Their proposal sought to give school employees access to vaccines but stopped short of the specific allocation outlined by Newsom. The lawmakers’ $6.6-billion plan focuses on elementary schools

and offers state funds for health and safety needs at those locations, as well as money to cover programs later in the school year to address learning losses suffered by millions of California schoolchil­dren.

But the legislativ­e plan does not have the governor’s endorsemen­t. When asked if he would veto the legislatio­n, Newsom said Friday he had “made it crystal clear” that he can’t support it.

Advisors to the governor said they believe the proposal would upend existing

rules regarding coronaviru­s testing on school campuses and would wrongly subject every detail in school safety plans to collective bargaining with school employee unions. The administra­tion believes the union members should be given the right to accept or reject the safety plan as a whole.

“My fear about what was put out is actually it’s going to slow down our ability to reopen schools safely,” Newsom said Friday. “That’s my concern.”

Assembly Speaker Anthony

Rendon (D-Lakewood) rejected those concerns but applauded the governor’s vaccinatio­n directive.

“I’m supportive of any plan that gets vaccines to teachers who need them and lets schools open up quickly and safely,” Rendon said in a written statement.

A representa­tive of the California Teachers Assn. described the 10% allotment as “an important step to ensuring teachers and school staff have access to the vaccine before opening schools and worksites for in-person instructio­n.”

“Testing, low community transmissi­on rates and vaccines are necessary to safely reopen schools for in-person teaching and learning, along with the multilayer­ed safety measures required by the [Centers for Disease Control and Prevention] and [California Department of Public Health],” said associatio­n spokeswoma­n Claudia Briggs.

Newsom’s announceme­nt stood in contrast to several weeks’ worth of comments urging educators not to make vaccinatio­ns a preconditi­on to reopening elementary schools, a position the governor took in late December that struggled to win acceptance in the Legislatur­e. Last month, Newsom told a group of school administra­tors that a mandate for vaccines was tantamount to saying that in-person learning wouldn’t happen during the current academic year.

California’s supply of vaccines has appeared to gradually rise in recent weeks.

In a Twitter post Friday, Newsom said over 1.3 million doses would be available next week, increasing to 1.4 million in the final week of February and more than 1.5 million by early March — the week the education vaccine program would begin.

“The reason we can do [educator vaccine priority] more formally, even though we’ve allowed for it over the course of the last number of weeks, is the window of visibility into the future with more vaccinatio­ns that are now coming from the Biden administra­tion,” the governor said.

 ?? Al Seib Los Angeles Times ?? BUS DRIVER Devan Nanayakkar­a, right, greets L.A. schools Supt. Austin Beutner after being vaccinated Wednesday. The state’s new vaccine policy will prioritize appointmen­ts for teachers, support staff and others.
Al Seib Los Angeles Times BUS DRIVER Devan Nanayakkar­a, right, greets L.A. schools Supt. Austin Beutner after being vaccinated Wednesday. The state’s new vaccine policy will prioritize appointmen­ts for teachers, support staff and others.

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