Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Public schools set shot priorities

K-5 teachers among first in line for vaccine

- By Mick Stinelli

When the Pittsburgh Public School district begins vaccinatin­g employees next week, it will prioritize teachers and staff serving students in kindergart­en through fifth grade, elementary school bus drivers, and special education and English- language services teachers, the district announced Friday.

Also on Friday, one year after the discovery of the first coronaviru­s case in Pennsylvan­ia, Gov. Tom Wolf said it has been a tough and trying year, but there is hope and a light at the end of the tunnel with the growing availabili­ty of vaccines.

Vaccinatio­ns at city schools are set to begin between March 10-14, said Assistant Superinten­dent Rodney Necciai.

The district, which has more than 2,000 teachers, is still waiting to see how many vaccine doses it will receive as part of Mr. Wolf’s plan to prioritize pre-K-12 educators as the state receives 94,000 doses of the recently approved Johnson & Johnson COVID-19 vaccine.

Nearly all teachers in the district are expected to return to inperson instructio­n by March 22 as PPS moves forward with a phased approach to reopening that also includes precaution­s of mask-wearing and social distancing, the

district said this week.

“This [vaccine] gives another layer of mitigation strategy to support us coming back to our environmen­t in a healthy way,” Superinten­dent Anthony Hamlet said during a virtual briefing.

Teachers are not required to get the inoculatio­n, Mr. Hamlet said, and they are still expected to come to inperson instructio­n even if they have not received the vaccine.

Mr. Wolf announced on March 6, 2020, that Pennsylvan­ia had confirmed its first two cases of the coronaviru­s.

Since then, Pennsylvan­ia has seen several spikes in cases; counted more than 944,000 confirmed or probable cases of the virus; and attributed more than 24,200 deaths to COVID-19, the disease caused by it. More than 868,000 people have been fully vaccinated in Pennsylvan­ia, according to the state Department of Health.

“This has been a tough year,” Mr. Wolf said, speaking at a news conference outside a Rite Aid in Dauphin County. “I’m not sure there isn’t anybody in Pennsylvan­ia who isn’t frustrated, sad, maybe even grieving for a loved one who has been lost. ... There’s a lot of sadness. But at this point, though, we have something we didn’t have a year ago, and that is hope. There is a light at the end of the tunnel.”

Mr. Wolf’s comments came as new COVID-19 cases in Pennsylvan­ia appeared to plateau Friday with the state reporting nearly the same number of infections in the past week as the prior sevenday period.

According to the Pennsylvan­ia Department of Health, the state saw 13,275 new cases of COVID-19 between Feb. 26 and Thursday. It was only a slight drop from the 13,294 cases the previous week.

The new data presents a slowdown in the downward trend in the past several weeks, with the previous period seeing a drop of 2,200 weekly cases. The week before brought an even greater decrease of 5,400 cases.

Fewer people receiving a test are getting positive results, however, down from 6.2% to 5.7%. Average daily hospitaliz­ations dropped by more than 300 to 1,679.

On Friday, the state Department of Health reported 43 more people were confirmed to have died after testing positive, and there were 2,757 new infections.

The new numbers bring the state’s total to 944,196 cases and 24,262 people dead from the virus.

The vaccine effort against the virus also continues, with almost 2.8 million doses administer­ed in the state, a jump from 2.6 million the day before, according to the department.

Allegheny County accounts for about 127,000 of those vaccinatio­ns, with the county reporting 288 new COVID-19 cases and nine

newly confirmed deaths.

The dates of death range from Dec. 9 to Wednesday, the county reported, due to some additional data from the statewide Electronic Death Reporting System. Five of the deaths were associated with long-term care facilities.

Among those people who died, three were in their 60s, three were in their 70s, two were in their 80s and the oldest was above 90.

The new cases come from 185 confirmed tests and 103 probable positives, the county said. The infected people ranged in age from 4 to 91 years, making for a median age of 38.

In total, the county has seen 77,803 cases of COVID19, with 5,142 hospitaliz­ations and 1,697 deaths.

More informatio­n about COVID-19 and vaccines can be found on the county’s dashboard and the Pennsylvan­ia Department of Health website.

 ?? Matt Rouke/Associated Press ?? Gov. Tom Wolf speaks with Darlene Morris, 83, as she waits to receive a COVID-19 vaccine at a Rite Aid pharmacy in Steelton, Pa., on Friday.
Matt Rouke/Associated Press Gov. Tom Wolf speaks with Darlene Morris, 83, as she waits to receive a COVID-19 vaccine at a Rite Aid pharmacy in Steelton, Pa., on Friday.
 ?? Sources: Pennsylvan­ia and Allegheny County department­s of health Post-Gazette ?? *The negative figure is the result of updating the county of residency.
Sources: Pennsylvan­ia and Allegheny County department­s of health Post-Gazette *The negative figure is the result of updating the county of residency.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States