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British Columbia

Vaccine mandate likely for teachers, school staff though implementation details undecided

All signs are pointing to a vaccine mandate for teachers and school staff in B.C., but the details of how and who should implement it are still in question.

Province has said it's up to the 60 school districts to implement their own mandates

B.C. Premier John Horgansaid on Thursday that the province is ready and willing to work with the 60 individual school districts to implement a vaccine mandate. (Mike McArthur/CBC)

All signs are pointing to a vaccine mandate for teachers and school staff in B.C., but the details of how and who should implement itarestill in question.

The province's school trustees' association and the teachers' federation both say they supporta vaccine mandate in order toprotect students and school staff, but they wantthe provincial government to order it.

The province has said it is up to elected trustees and B.C.'s 60 school districts to come up with their own vaccine mandates for school staff.

Teri Mooring, president of the B.C. Teachers' Federation, noted that vaccination rates are lower in some parts of the province, like the Peace region in the north, so trustees there may face "a high level of pushback" about requiring teachers to be vaccinated as a condition of employment.

"We could have a situation where the parts of the province that need mandates the most would be the least likely to implement them,'' Mooring said, adding that a patchwork approach could affect any unvaccinated teachers working in multiple districts.

During a press conferenceThursday, Premier John Horgan said vaccine mandates for workers in B.C.'s schools are a last resort and elected board trustees know what's needed for their communities rather than the province enforcing such decisions.

WATCH: Premier John Horganspeaks onvaccine mandate forschools

'I think it will be done in short order,' says Horgan on the vaccine mandate for school staff

3 years ago
Duration 1:07
B.C. Premier John Horgan says he's confident that school districts will be heading towards a mandate 'very, very soon.'

"We [have been] working with stakeholders in K-12 for some time to build trust and we need to make sure that provincial school districts are all having a say in how we proceed," Horgan said.

His remarks came after the province announced on Tuesday that vaccination will be required for the thousands of employees in B.C.'s public service and for visitors to many health-care settings, including long-term and assisted care.

Calls for vaccine mandates for school staff aregrowingasnew modelling shows cases of COVID-19 are rising among children under the age of 12 as the fourth wave of the pandemic continues.

Mooring said the teachers' union sent its45,000 members a letter Thursday night saying its leadership is planning to meet with the B.C. Public School Employers' Association and the Education Ministry to ensure that a provincial vaccine mandate would include a process to accommodate teachers and protect their rights through grievances if necessary.

According to B.C. School TrusteesAssociationpresident Stephanie Higginson,school boards had hoped tohave a vaccine mandate for school workers in place by September.

Now, she says, they just want it in placeas fast as possible.

B.C. SchoolTrusteesAssociation president Stephanie Higginson says the association has been asking the government for support since June on how to implement a vaccine mandate in schools. (B.C. School Trustees Association)

"The details of the how and the what are ... one of those tricky details we need to work out," Higginson said Fridayon CBC's The Early Edition. "We need tofind out how much support we have from the province ... and we need to make sure we can do it quickly."

Mooring, meanwhile,recommended that teachersand school staff get vaccinated because the union may not be able to help them unless they have a legitimate exemption, should the province require them to be vaccinated.

School trustees not medical experts

Mission school board chairTracy Lofflersaid she's not sure school trustees should be making decisions regarding vaccine mandates.

"We're not doctors, we're not epidemiologists," she said.

"Boards are well equipped to make decisions regarding student achievement... Should these people be making medical decisions?"

Lofflersays the board has been "very deliberate" about following orders and guidance from public health officials and experts in the province,and is seeking more guidance about whether to implement a vaccine mandate for staff in the Missiondistrict.

Mission is in the area of the Fraser Valley where new restrictions were recently announced after a surge in the number of people diagnosed with COVID-19 particularly among those who are not vaccinated.

Meanwhile, an independent modelling group analyzingthe pandemic in B.C. says cases among children have risen steeply in the Fraser Valley, Interior and Vancouver Island health authority regions,as they account for nearly half of the province's unvaccinated residents.

It predicts at least 20 per cent of those under 12 will be infected with the COVID-19virus within two years.

On Thursday, Horgan said he was advised by Provincial Health OfficerDr. Bonnie Henrythat Health Canada will soon be reviewing plans to immunize kids aged fiveto 11 and officials are working on logistics of delivering those vaccines onceit's been approved.

With files from Daybreak South, The Early Edition and The Canadian Press