The Boston Teachers Union and the Wu administration have signed a "memorandum of agreement" under which teachers who refuse to go near a needle can keep working as long as they undergo two Covid-19 tests a week - and as long as Covid-19 infection rates are relatively low.
According to the mayor's office:
The signed MOA allows unvaccinated members to submit proof of two negative COVID-19 screening tests per week during periods of lower virus transmission, the specifics of which are outlined in the agreement. During periods of higher virus transmission, unvaccinated members will not be allowed in school buildings, but may use some accrued time as an alternative to being placed on unpaid administrative leave.
The agreement calls for using the same criteria as those recently announced for eliminating the requirement to show proof of vaccination to get into public indoor spaces: Hospital ICU bed use below 95%, fewer than 200 hospital beds occupied by people with Covid-19 and a seven-day average test positivity rate below 5%.
The School Committee still needs to approved the agreement.
When Mayor Wu first announced the city's new get-vaccinated-or-laid-off policy, she and city health officials said the rapid spread of the omicron variant had made an earlier one-test-a-week alternative to vaccination impractical.
Unions representing firefighters and police superior officers and detectives sued over the policy. A Suffolk Superior Court judge refused to block implementation, but the unions appealed and a Massachusetts Appeals Court judge put the vaccination mandate on hold until she could consider the issue - something she has been doing since Feb. 1, when the city filed a response to the union lawsuit.
Separately, a City Council committee holds a hearing at 10 a.m. on Friday on the Wu administration's vaccination mandates for city workers. The hearing will be conducted via Zoom, not in person.
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Comments
Must be another decision
By Notfromboston
Thu, 02/10/2022 - 2:31pm
Must be another decision arrived at by a straw-poll of a random group of teenagers.
Why only teachers and not
By anon
Thu, 02/10/2022 - 2:50pm
Why only teachers and not firefighters or police?
Collective bargaining ...
By adamg
Thu, 02/10/2022 - 3:35pm
The unions objected to an across-the-board change in the memoranda of agreement signed by the Janey administration - which allowed for weekly testing instead of shots - and so we got three first-responder unions suing the city.
The city then started bargaining with each of the unions. The teachers and City Hall reached an agreement; firefighters and police did not (well, the BPPA did, but the union membership voted it down).
I'm willing to bet
By Waquiot
Thu, 02/10/2022 - 4:36pm
That the other city unions will sign off on similar agreements.
But honestly, Adam. Are you really claiming that the BPPA voted down this exact same agreement?
No, not really
By perruptor
Thu, 02/10/2022 - 4:43pm
Adam said no such thing. He said they voted down AN agreement, not this agreement.
Are you sure?
By Waquiot
Thu, 02/10/2022 - 5:44pm
I case you can't go that high up the comment chain, here's what he wrote
Sure seems like he's saying the BPPA voted down the agreement the BTU (or whichever union or unions representing BPS employees) agreed to.
Yes, it states clearly that
By npyritz
Thu, 02/10/2022 - 7:05pm
Yes, it states clearly that they also reached “an” agreement, which was voted down.
Dishonest
By perruptor
Fri, 02/11/2022 - 8:30am
You left out the defining context of that quote. Adam wrote:
Nowhere does Adam say or imply that the BPPA voted on the same agreement that the teachers got. If you can't be bothered to be honest, why should we pay your opinions any mind?
I stand by what I wrote
By Waquiot
Fri, 02/11/2022 - 10:37pm
As apparently does Adam. As written, the BTU and City Hall reached an agreement, as did the BPPA and City Hall, but the membership of the BPPA voted it down. There is an implication that the union membership voted this agreement. I didn't mention the IAFF, since they have never reached an agreement with City Hall either way. They fought tooth and nail, even criticizing the BPPA for bargaining with the City on this. At the end of the day, the BTU got something that could be the template for other city unions.
Years back, there was an advertisement that had a friend worried. I explained what the advertisement meant, which lead her to say that she was wrong. I then noted that if the advertisement needed explanation, it wasn't a good ad. To say the least, that was not a well written sentence.
No, there isn't an "it"
By perruptor
Sat, 02/12/2022 - 8:24am
As Adam explicitly stated, he did not know what was in the voted-down BPPA agreement, and so your assumption that it was the same as the teachers' one is misguided, and your assertion that Adam implied that it was the same agreement is just wrong. He also explicitly said he didn't.
You really are exhibiting some reading-comprehension problems here. To dredge up a years-old anecdote about how you managed to convince some person that your interpretation of an ad was correct is hugely irrelevant.
But we do what the BPPA rejected
By Waquiot
Sat, 02/12/2022 - 12:16pm
From other sources. The deal was that BPPA members would still be required to get the jabs, but in return members would have gotten a few extra days of leave. It was rejected because, as the firefighters noted, this isn't about getting more money (which leave technically is.)
There's no way that Adam didn't know that, unless the claim is that Adam isn't paying attention to the issue, which we know isn't the case. Check the Globe from January 26, which discusses the proposal. Wu was adamant that all employees get vaccinated at the time. It would appear that a few weeks later her stance has softened.
BPPA voted down *an* agreement
By adamg
Thu, 02/10/2022 - 7:47pm
I have no clue what was in that agreement because at the time the news was the voting down union leadership, not what was in the agreement, so, no, I am not saying they voted down what the teachers voted for.
I thought you were a better reporter than that
By Waquiot
Thu, 02/10/2022 - 10:19pm
Look, you've been following this story, and surely if you didn't know the details of what the BPPA membership rejected, you know that Wu didn't offer them a variation of the agreement they made with Janey, which is what this agreement is. If Wu's stance at the start of the year was that now unvaccinated employees have to get tested twice a week instead of once, no one would be talking about this change.
It’s not a one circumstance fits all plan
By brianjdamico
Thu, 02/10/2022 - 10:32pm
From the Globe, there’s colored “zones” that seem to dictate when testing is okay vs. when unvaccinated employees must be excluded from the workplace and the firefighters union spoke to the Globe on it.
https://www.bostonglobe.com/2022/02/10/metro/miche...
I didn't think you were a better reader than that
By perruptor
Fri, 02/11/2022 - 8:35am
But to put up a comment based on a misreading of what Adam wrote, then double down by quoting only part of his comment, that's dishonest. Own your mistakes, why don't you?
Businesses
By robo
Thu, 02/10/2022 - 4:31pm
I feel bad for the businesses that have to do whatever Mayor Wu says. Meanwhile, your kid’s getting taught by an unvaccinated teacher.
Sympathy
By emac
Sun, 02/13/2022 - 10:43am
I feel bad for all the people (vaccinated and more often unvaccinated) who’ve gotten sick with covid and died.
Bad agreement
By JPMom
Thu, 02/10/2022 - 6:51pm
This is another example of the vaccinated accommodating the unvaccinated who continue to fuel the pandemic. Thanks a lot.
Someone here said once
By jmeltzer
Fri, 02/11/2022 - 8:36am
"you all only complain if it's cops and firefighters, not teachers."
Well, you're wrong.
Fire all of them.
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