The leaders of three teachers’ unions in Massachusetts are supporting an emergency legislation that would delay the school reopening for the state’s youngest students for another three weeks.
State Education Commissioner Jeffrey Riley, who heads the Bay State’s K-12 systems, has ordered school districts to bring students from pre-K to 5th grade back to classrooms for full-time instruction by April 5. Middle schools are scheduled to reopen on April 28.
The emergency legislation, proposed by Democrat state Reps. Lindsay Sabadosa and James Hawkins, would block Riley from requiring school districts reopen for in-person learning before April 26.
According to the statement, the unions didn’t want to “skip the line” or be prioritized ahead of the sick and elderly, but were asking the state to classify teachers as essential workers so that they have the same vaccination priority as “firefighters and nurses.”
In response, Baker’s office said that teachers don’t need to be vaccinated to return to in-person work.
“More than 80 percent of school districts are already teaching students in-person or hybrid,” Baker spokesperson Sarah Finlaw said in a statement to The Associated Press on Sunday. “Months of data from right here in Massachusetts and countless studies from world-class medical organizations have made clear that schools are safe for in-person learning.”
“No legitimate public health or medical organization, nor the CDC, recommends vaccinating all teachers before reopening schools,” Finlaw said.