Los Angeles Times

34,000 LAUSD KIDS LACK SHOTS

In January, students without the jab face independen­t study or leaving the district.

- By Howard Blume

About 34,000 students have not yet complied with the COVID-19 vaccine mandate in the Los Angeles Unified School District — and there’s no longer enough time for students who have not gotten their first shot to be fully vaccinated by the Jan. 10 start of the second semester, portending significan­t disruption to their education as they will be barred from campus.

The high number of students who will not be able to meet the full inoculatio­n deadline is likely to force difficult decisions on leaders of the second-largest U.S. school system, which has enacted among the strictest vaccine mandates in the nation. Students who are not fully vaccinated — or exempt — will be forced into the district’s independen­t study program or will have to leave the Los Angeles public school system.

Shifting 34,000 students 12 and older into independen­t study would be challengin­g — especially as the district’s independen­t study program, called City of Angels, has been beset by staffing shortages and confusion after it was inundated at the start of the school year with about 10,000 students, a number that grew to 16,000. The 34,000 total by itself would make up one of the 25 largest school systems in California.

There’s no indication that L.A. Unified is backing down — with no leniency or extended deadlines under public discussion.

“Our schools have some of the strongest safety standards in the nation and we plan on keeping it that way,” interim Supt. Megan Reilly said in a video broadcast during Tuesday’s school board meeting. Despite the determined statement, the video message was mostly a soft-sell, with smiling students urging their peers to be vaccinated “like me,” as they said, one after another.

The L.A. school system is one of the few in the nation

with a student vaccine mandate — and also among a small number with an employee vaccine mandate. The employee mandate has already taken effect, with relatively modest disruption, because an overwhelmi­ng majority of workers complied. Employees could request an exemption for personal beliefs; students will not have that option.

The compliance rate, so far, of nearly 85% for students has improved since Nov. 22, when it was 80% and about 44,000 students were not on track. The district has waged an intense publicawar­eness campaign and there is widespread availabili­ty of vaccines on campus. About 450,000 pre-kindergart­en through 12thgrade students are enrolled in L.A. Unified.

“We have to give credit to the district for taking on the vaccinatio­n mandate and embracing the challenges that came with offering vaccinatio­ns at schools,” said Ana Ponce, executive director of Great Public Schools Now, a locally based advocacy group. “And I think we need to be fair and not hold the district completely accountabl­e for vaccine hesitancy.”

All the same, she said, “What’s the Plan B?”

Principals and other administra­tors posed that same question after a district presentati­on Monday night to their union, Associated Administra­tors of Los Angeles. What will happen after an exodus of students move to an online setting? How many teachers would have to follow them? Would campus classes and schedules have to be reshaped overnight?

“Do we have a hard deadline as to when we’re going to get answers on this?” an administra­tor asked senior district managers. “When are we going to know, respectful­ly?”

The answer was: Maybe by Friday.

Parents opposed to the mandate have similar questions.

“It would be a significan­t equity issue for thousands of students to be forced back into the distance learning that has already been proven to be a failure,” said Sharon McKeeman, founder of Let Them Choose, a San Diego County-based group that is spearheadi­ng litigation against student COVID vaccine mandates. “Even after asserting both pressure and rewards, LAUSD does not seem to be on track to meet its accelerate­d vaccinatio­n deadline.”

Two lawsuits against the L.A. Unified student mandate are pending. So far, litigation against San Diego Unified’s student mandate has not prevailed. But the mandates in the two districts are not identical. The requiremen­t in San Diego Unified, the second-largest district in California, for example, applies only to students 16 and older.

Parents and students opposed to the mandate have called in to every recent school board meeting — pleading their cause, threatenin­g litigation. But a quieter pro-vaccine majority might be just as upset to see the district back down from its deadline.

The teachers union wants the district to hold firm.

“It is simply the right thing to do,” union Vice President Juan Ramirez told the school board Tuesday. “It is the responsibl­e thing to do.”

He added that the mandate should be extended to privately operated, districtau­thorized charter schools, which serve about 1 in 5 L.A. Unified students. Charters have to abide by the student mandate only when they operate on a district campus shared with a district school.

It is unclear how much higher the student compliance numbers will grow.

It could be that many families have simply not yet uploaded documentat­ion. When that happens, thousands more students could be on track. On the other hand, the current student compliance rate of nearly 85% is based on students who have received at least one shot. Many students will need to follow through and get a second shot on a timely basis to remain on track.

Students are considered in compliance if they get the vaccine, receive a medical exemption or obtain a rare deadline extension based on extenuatin­g circumstan­ces.

As the district braces for a surge of independen­tstudy students, one source for needed teachers would be those who declined to comply with the district’s employee vaccine mandate. The district has held on to 808 instructor­s “with a qualifying medical condition or sincerely held religious belief eligible for reasonable accommodat­ion,” as the district puts it. The district has terminated few, if any, classroom teachers for refusing to get vaccinated.

Employees in other jobs or members of other unions have not been so lucky. The district on Tuesday said that 496 employees — out of about 73,000 — have lost their jobs. Those released included seven with a teaching credential, although it was not immediatel­y clear if they are classroom teachers.

“Vaccinatio­ns are a term or condition of employment,” the district said in a statement. “If separated employees do get vaccinated, they may be eligible for reemployme­nt.”

“We care deeply about all of our employees,” Reilly said. “Parting ways with individual­s who choose not to be vaccinated is an extremely difficult, but necessary decision to ensure the safety of all in our school communitie­s.”

Already, about 515 of the unvaccinat­ed teachers have been transferre­d to City of Angels to oversee the 16,000 students currently enrolled.

The Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine is the only one available to students 12 and older. The second shot is not administer­ed until at least three weeks after the first. Maximum immunity is achieved about two weeks after the second shot — a five-week time frame. Students who are 18 or older have the option of taking the one-dose Johnson & Johnson vaccine, followed by a two-week period to achieve maximum immunity.

L.A. Unified also is offering vaccines to students 5 and older, but not mandating them.

 ?? Gary Coronado Los Angeles Times ?? DOLORES GUZMAN, center, of Los Angeles protests LAUSD’s vaccine mandate at district headquarte­rs last month. Protesters said they want more trials for the COVID vaccines before inoculatin­g their children.
Gary Coronado Los Angeles Times DOLORES GUZMAN, center, of Los Angeles protests LAUSD’s vaccine mandate at district headquarte­rs last month. Protesters said they want more trials for the COVID vaccines before inoculatin­g their children.

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