Now we need our business community all-in too. This year, CEA members have been all-in to keep learning going amidst incredible challenges. In addition, we already have negotiated terms for remote learning in our current Memorandum of Understanding, meaning this can be done immediately with a structure in place to facilitate the best learning possible in the current circumstances. This pause will help minimize the spread of the Covid-19 Omicron surge and can be used to allow administrators the time to secure and distribute proper masks, deep clean our buildings and potentially make repairs to the HVAC systems that are not working. We can minimize learning loss and disruption to our community by calling a two-week pause inclusive of these days. Day, Records Day, and Professional Development. There is good news January 17, 18, and 19 are already scheduled days of non-student attendance for Martin Luther King Jr. Then on Friday, CEA was told to expect a communication from you to all CCS staff to provide some clarity, and instead got a business-as-usual message including the claim that “we are not seeing the spread of COVID-19 in our schools”, a statement that is simply outrageous and impossible to defend. CEA indicated in no uncertain terms that this was unacceptable and insulting, and thankfully your Administration shelved the idea. Instead, unbelievably, we received a plan to send non-instructional staff (primarily administrators) remote with no changes for classroom educators. CEA leadership was invited to a virtual meeting on Thursday and expected to receive a draft plan for the coming weeks. Our Union was told to expect clarity and communication by the end of last week. Worst of all, when inevitably poor staffing causes all schools to be closed, such as on Friday January 7, students receive no instruction whatsoever. This creates chaos and confusion for students, parents, and educators who don’t know what to expect. In addition, many buildings are reporting HVAC issues and are operating with little or no heat in the cold weather. Even when educators can cover enough classes, reported staffing shortages in transportation and food service are causing late busses and inadequate distribution of meals to students. Data suggests that we have between a 20 to 30 percent substitute fill rate for absent educators. the same day, is (as you stated in the press) unsustainable. The current model of daily decisions to open some schools on below-skeleton staffing and close others, sometimes as late as 6:30 A.M. Over the last two weeks, reported hospitalizations in Franklin County from COVID-19 are up by 25%. We strongly believe that the best way to ensure maximum in-person learning in the coming months is to combat the current surge with decisive action today. First and foremost, we agree wholeheartedly with your position that the best learning takes place in-person, in our schools. We, the undersigned educators, and proud members of the Columbus Education Association, call upon your Administration to immediately institute a two-week temporary remote learning pause to get us through the worst of the current COVID-19 Omicron surge.
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