Prioritize Child Care Workers for Covid 19 Vaccination

Dear Governor Lamont,

Connecticut's childcare sector performs an essential service.  It cares for children so parents can work.  Our families, and our entire economy depend on this system. We are writing because many of us have remained open while schools were closed or temporarily switched to distance learning. Unlike k-12 schools, we are required to maintain rigid staff to child ratios to assure child safety. Recently, as infection rates have ticked up, more of us have had staff out because they have either tested positive themselves or had quarantine due to an exposure to someone who tested positive. Losing staff to illness or quarantine challenges our ability to maintain the ratios necessary to remain open so that parents can continue working.

We are writing to request that all child care providers, including staff at child care centers, home-based family child care providers and camp counselors be put into the 2nd priority group for vaccinations along with other essential workers like public school teachers. We work with very young children who need more assistance with eating and toileting, so our work puts us in closer contact with children than public school teachers.  Additionally, children under 2 cannot wear masks, creating another level of vulnerability for everyone involved. We ask that you not forget us as you plan the priority groups to receive vaccinations in the first phase when the vaccine is still in limited supply.

 

Who's signing

Jane Kaeser
Edie Reichard
George delCampo
Ceara Ladue
Curt Leng
Reina Leon-Sanchez
Sheila Daniels
Jane Levene
Mary Oster
Jonathan Farrar
Sade Pramberger
Florence Villano
Theresa Gostkowski
Shannon Cowles
Stacey Mahoney
Matthew LaPrino
Lori Osber
Carmelita Valencia-Daye
Bridget S
Susan DeLancy
Bernadette Hess
Monica Edgerton
Tracie Cheng
Dianne Selditch
Jacqueline Beirne
Chris Melillo
jody goeler
Shannon Gale
Suzy Almeida
Julia Miller
GOAL: 1,157 signatures

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Showing 892 reactions

  • Jane Kaeser
  • Edie Reichard
  • George delCampo
  • Ceara Ladue
  • Curt Leng
  • Reina Leon-Sanchez
  • Sheila Daniels
  • Jane Levene
  • Mary Oster
  • Jonathan Farrar
  • Sade Pramberger
  • Florence Villano
  • Theresa Gostkowski
  • Shannon Cowles
  • Stacey Mahoney
  • Matthew LaPrino
  • Lori Osber
  • Carmelita Valencia-Daye
  • Bridget S
  • Susan DeLancy
  • Bernadette Hess
  • Monica Edgerton
    Early Child Care Educators must be included in the same priority level as K-12 Educators. Family Child Care Educators (home day care owners) are especially in need of the vaccine because they provide the essential service of not only caring for little ones, but also school age children whenever the schools close. They are tasked with caring for babies in diapers while supporting the online learning of school-age children.


    Most Home Day Care Programs have not closed throughout the pandemic, and the ones that have threaten to jeopardize our work force. Home day care programs often care for children of essential workers who work non-traditional hours, such as doctors, first responders, factory workers, and food service professionals. In addition, during pre-COVID times, these Family Child Care Educators frequently cared for school-age children before and after school, helping them with homework and feeding them breakfast and after-school snacks. Child Care Educators are essential and often forgotten. This pandemic is making us realize the essential service they provide to children, families, and communities. We cannot survive without them.
  • Tracie Cheng
  • Dianne Selditch
  • Jacqueline Beirne
  • Chris Melillo
  • jody goeler
  • Shannon Gale
  • Suzy Almeida
  • Julia Miller