Members of the Camas School Board said this week they are calling on Governor Jay Inslee, Washington Superintendent of Public Instruction Chris Reykdal and the state’s department of health to ensure K-12 educators are moved up on the list of Washingtonians allowed to receive COVID-19 vaccines.
“We’re fairly late on the list compared to other states,” school board member Corey McEnry, who also works as a high school band director in the Hockinson School District, told other Camas School Board members on Monday, Jan. 11.
McEnry added that Washington’s COVID-19 vaccination schedule would allow one group of K-12 teachers, those over the age of 50, to receive vaccinations in February, while other teachers would not receive their vaccines until April.
“Other states are administering those vaccinations to staff now,” McEnry said.
The other Camas school board members, including board president Tracey Malone, Erika Cox, Connie Hennessey and Doug Quinn, agreed, and said they would especially like to see teachers and school staff have access to COVID-19 vaccines now that the district is beginning its transition back to in-person learning, with first- and second-graders set to return to their classrooms for small-group, part-time learning on Jan. 19.
Hennessey also mentioned that there is a new strain of COVID-19 — B117, which researchers have said is much more contagious and may be more likely to infect younger people — and said she had been wondering about vaccines for educators and school staff.