As D.C. gets set to begin a school year with a COVID-19 vaccine mandate for some students, the D.C. branch of the NAACP is calling on D.C. Public Schools to expand their remote leaning programs to better accommodate unvaccinated students.
The first day of classes is Aug. 29. The school district says students 12 and older must have their first dose by Sept. 16, or they will not be allowed to attend classes or school activities.
In a statement Wednesday, the NAACP said it 鈥渟upports the DCPS COVID-19 vaccine mandate,鈥 saying it鈥檚 important to ensure the health of students, staff and the community.
But the group warned that the mandate could disproportionately affect Black attendance at school 鈥 and that could have ripple effects on school resources.
鈥淢andatory vaccinations may negatively impact attendance, and attendance impacts school funding, resources and students鈥 academic success,” branch president Akosua Ali said in the statement. 鈥淎 quality, virtual learning program is necessary to keep students safe, while ensuring existing achievement gaps are not exacerbated.鈥
As of last week, D.C. COVID-19 data says 100% of white children ages 12 to 15 have received their COVID-19 shots, while 61% of Black children that age are vaccinated.
The NAACP called on DCPS to provide options for students who can鈥檛 or won鈥檛 get vaccinated, and adopt a 鈥渉old harmless鈥 policy that would protect school funding from cuts related to enrollment declines.
At the same time, the group said, the school system should reach out to unvaccinated households to combat vaccine hesitancy.
Ali called vaccinations 鈥渃ritical to foster a safe, healthy, educational environment,鈥 adding, 鈥淭his pandemic is not over. COVID-19 and aggressive variants continue to ravage communities and unvaccinated, Black families are impacted at disproportionate rates.鈥
