Los Angeles Times

L.A. Unified to get 40% of county school staff vaccines

- By Howard Blume

Forty percent of coronaviru­s vaccines available for school staff in Los Angeles County will go to the L.A. Unified School District through a new distributi­on formula designed to help reopen campuses sooner in areas hardest hit by the pandemic and student learning loss.

Though that 40% share is generous, it falls well short of what officials say they would need to reopen elementary classrooms by early April.

Details about the vaccine distributi­on were provided in a news conference with county officials and by the L.A. County Office of Education as the state prepares to allocate about 10% of available doses to the education sector starting on March 1.

L.A. Unified enrolls about one-third of the county’s public school students in kindergart­en through 12th grade, but student numbers are not all that matter. The district’s share also derives from a formula that accounts for poverty and the prevalence of COVID-19 in the communitie­s it serves, said county education office Supt. Debra Duardo.

“My priority is to ensure that resources are directed through an equity lens to support student and staff safety on campus so that we can focus on recovering from the academic and socialemot­ional challenges created by COVID-19,” said Duardo, whose agency provides support and oversight for the county’s 80 school districts.

County officials did not release informatio­n Wednesday about allocation­s to other school districts.

The number of doses available next week is expected to be announced Thursday, but based on last week’s allotment, there would be about 10,000 doses available per week countywide for the education sector, according to the state health department. There are about 691,000 educations­ector workers in L.A. County, according to the county Department of Public Health. That figure includes workers in child care, private schools and higher education.

The number of doses sent to L.A. County is expected to increase in the coming weeks.

The new distributi­on formula divides the school systems into five groups, each representi­ng about 20% of public school students. L.A. Unified, the second-largest school district in the nation with 465,000 students, counts for two zones all by itself. Besides equity factors, doses also are allotted based the number of school employees already providing services in person.

By that last metric, L.A. Unified does not fare well. No students will receive inperson services until March 4, when fewer than 1% are expected to return initially. But the school system receives additional doses based on the 80% of students who qualify for a free or reduced-price school lunch — a standard marker for family poverty. And the pandemic’s toll in some parts of L.A. Unified has been among the worst in the nation.

Every school district will receive some doses every week.

For L.A. Unified parents, the question remains: How soon will these vaccinatio­ns lead to classes on campus? For about 250,000 students in kindergart­en through sixth grade, the answer is uncertain.

On Tuesday, district officials spoke of a target reopening date of about April 9. But to achieve that, said Supt. Austin Beutner, some 25,000 employees would need their first of two doses by the end of next week. Those employees would include teachers, aides, campus clerical staff, administra­tors, custodians, foodservic­e workers and bus drivers. Reaching maximum immunity takes five to six weeks after the first dose.

Health authoritie­s have cleared elementary schools to open regardless of the vaccine status of employees. And a fair number have done so. But in key large, urban districts in California, employee unions are demanding vaccines prior to a fullscale return.

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