The Day

How are local school staff getting the vaccine?

Foxwoods, Mohegan Sun will hold clinics for those in certain health districts

- By ERICA MOSER Day Staff Writer

When Gov. Ned Lamont announced Monday that school staff could get the COVID-19 vaccine at designated clinics in March, teachers and administra­tors had a lot of questions.

When and how could they start booking appointmen­ts? How could they be assured Connecticu­t would get enough doses for educators? How would districts avoid a situation where a lot of staff members are out sick at the same time due to side effects?

Following a week of surveys, meetings and conversati­ons with community partners, local health districts provided more informatio­n Friday morning in an email to superinten­dents and child care providers: School staff in Ledge Light Health District’s jurisdicti­on will be invited to clinics at Foxwoods Resort Casino, while those in Uncas Health District will be invited to clinics at Mohegan Sun.

Ledge Light covers East Lyme, Groton, Ledyard, Lyme, New London, North Stonington, Old Lyme, Stonington and Waterford. Uncas covers Bozrah, Franklin, Griswold, Lebanon, Lisbon, Montville, Norwich, Preston, Salem, Sprague and Voluntown.

Hartford HealthCare is running the vaccine clinics at Foxwoods, while Yale New Haven Health is running the ones at Mohegan Sun.

Steve Mansfield, director of Ledge Light Health District, said the vaccine supply for educators and child care providers will be a separate allocation from the Connecticu­t Department of Public Health, and their clinics won’t be open to the general public.

The governor’s office has set March 1 as the date when school employees can begin registerin­g, with the goal of getting the first dose to interested educators by the end of March.

Mansfield and Patrick McCormack, director of Uncas Health District, both said Friday that clinic dates and times are still being finalized.

Hartford HealthCare and Yale New Haven Health utilize MyChart, an app that allows patients and providers to manage and receive health informatio­n, and the Friday email said a link will be provided to share with employees, so they can create a MyChart account and register for an appointmen­t.

“Both health care groups said they would make appointmen­ts that are more flexible for teachers as well, so after-school hours or weekends,” McCormack said.

He noted that schools historical­ly don’t provide vaccines, and that if clinics were to happen on-site in schools, everybody would be vaccinated in one day, which could pose an issue if lots of staff members are out sick the same day due to side effects. In addition, utilizing the two health care systems makes sense due to vaccine storage considerat­ions, and both already being approved vaccine providers.

McCormack said educators can still use VAMS, the Vaccine Administra­tion Management System, to independen­tly find another clinic if they so choose.

Earlier last week, the local health districts surveyed superinten­dents about the number of employees eligible to be vaccinated in each district. Mansfield said there are about 6,000 in Ledge Light’s jurisdicti­on, while McCormack’s tally in Uncas Health District is 3,374.

Mansfield and McCormack touted the partnershi­p between two health districts, two health care systems and two tribes.

Mansfield also said he’s enthusiast­ic that Hartford HealthCare’s role will allow Ledge Light “to focus on those population­s that are typically underserve­d and the rest of the community that may not be able to get vaccinated so easily.” Ledge Light will continue scheduling clinics for the rest of the community; as of Monday, anyone over 55 living or working in Connecticu­t will be eligible.

Local superinten­dents weigh in on vaccine process

Groton Superinten­dent Susan Austin said all active employees are loaded in VAMS, and they have the option to schedule through VAMS or other providers.

Austin said if getting vaccinated during the school day is

the only option for a staff member, they could use their sick time, as they would for a doctor appointmen­t, and follow the district’s same communicat­ion protocols to notify the district of an absence ahead of time so the district can ensure a substitute is in place.

Austin said the teachers’ union did a survey and found that about 90% of teachers said they intend to get vaccinated, while Norwich Superinten­dent Kristen Stringfell­ow said a survey showed that 85% of school staff plan to get the vaccine.

The vaccine is voluntary, and Stringfell­ow said the only change in protocol is that 14 days after getting the second dose, a staff member will be exempt from the requiremen­t to quarantine if they come in close contact with a COVID-positive person.

Preston Superinten­dent Roy Seitsinger stressed that the vaccines are not mandatory, and there will be no consequenc­es for staff who decide not to get vaccinated.

In a FAQ sent to school staff Friday, Stonington Superinten­dent Van Riley said staff members don’t have to wait for direction from the district to make an appointmen­t, that they’re encouraged “to utilize all methods available to you to make a vaccine appointmen­t starting March 1st” and that the dedicated clinics are “to simply make the vaccine more accessible to school employees.”

“The registrati­on process is still evolving. We will send out additional informatio­n about registerin­g as soon as we receive it,” the FAQ said. Staff members shouldn’t expect to have an appointmen­t scheduled on Monday.

East Lyme Superinten­dent Jeffrey Newton said the district will work collaborat­ively with Ledge Light to work around whatever schedule is set up. Newton agreed that

“you can’t have all of your staff on a school day heading off to go get vaccinated,” adding that “if you vaccinate everybody all at once or the same time, people could become sick.”

Lyme-Old Lyme Superinten­dent Ian Neviaser said teachers who get vaccinated during the day will use sick and/or personal time. The district hasn’t surveyed school staff on whether they plan to get vaccinated, and he said deciding not to get vaccinated won’t impact one’s job.

Ledyard Superinten­dent Jay Hartling said he has been working with Ledge Light to communicat­e the most up-to-date informatio­n so school-based staff in the district know their eligibilit­y and understand the options they have for scheduling vaccinatio­n appointmen­ts. He said a few district staff members already were eligible, being over age 65, and the variety of venues for scheduling those appointmen­ts has been a little daunting.

Plans to get school staff vaccinated vary throughout the state.

“In some cases, there will be clinics held at high school gyms, for example. In other cases, there are already places set up by the local department­s of health,” Fran Rabinowitz,

executive director of the Connecticu­t Associatio­n of Public School Superinten­dents, told Fox 61.

The New Haven Register reported that the New Haven Health Department will hold mass vaccinatio­n clinics for school staff and day care providers at Career High School on March 20, 24 and 31, plus a clinic for First Student Bus Co. that is tentativel­y scheduled for March 10. The East Shore District Health Department will set up a clinic at Branford High School.

Lamont on Thursday visited Waterbury, which set up a hotline for school staff to schedule appointmen­ts. Mayor Neil O’Leary said the district will have a dedicated section for school staff at the mass vaccinatio­n site at Waterbury Arts Magnet School.

The Northeast District Department of Health is partnering with Day Kimball Healthcare, which is holding clinics at schools and has one planned for Woodstock Public Schools on Thursday, NBC Connecticu­t reported.

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