

The PWCS School Board room meeting room. Security is now attempting to clear the room. @PWCSNews pic.twitter.com/AZI7woOBZ5
— Jared Foretek (@JaredGM19) September 16, 2021
Superintendent LaTanya McDade said that for staff members who declined to take the vaccine, their weekly tests would be available at division facilities free of charge, and said more details will be forthcoming. Employees will have to disclose their vaccine status by Nov. 1 and new employees will have to do so within 30 days of hire. “I believe that public health and public education are directly linked,” McDade said during the meeting. “We need to follow the science, examine the data and listen to the scientific experts. When it comes to the pandemic, scientists are unequivocal in their message: getting the vaccine is the best way to protect us and those around us.” The procedural changes the board unanimously approved will limit citizen comment time at board meetings to one hour and 30 speakers taking two-minute turns. Speakers will have to sign up in advance unless the 30 slots aren’t filled up by the start of the meeting. Only pre-approved signs will be allowed in the meeting room and the policy mandates that comment be “directly” related to school policy or operations. Informally, public comment has not been limited before, but Lateef said that technically this change would increase the time for comment going by the board’s rules. When the change was first proposed, he said it was related to what had happened at Loudoun County School Board meetings. During the time the building was cleared Wednesday night, dozens of those remaining milled about at the front entrance of the building. Rebecca Hermon, the grandmother of a Prince William student, was there with her daughter. She said she had concerns about what the students were being taught, and that the public should be able to voice their concerns directly to the school board. “If they’re still having the meeting, that’s not right,” she said of shutting down public comment and closing the meeting. “These people represent the community. And I’m sure everybody here is not going to be voting for them again. … Even if you don’t agree with somebody’s views that comes to the meeting, you still listen to them.” Another group of teachers also gathered outside the building. Oveta Scott, a 6th grade teacher at Fred Lynn Middle School, said the attacks on the school board and critical race theory were unfounded. “We teach the SOLs, that’s what we teach. The standards of learning. We don’t deviate from that. We get the curriculum guide, pacing maps, all that stuff,” Scott said. “We’re not teaching CRT,” Riley O’Casey, an 8th grade social studies teacher said. “We teach the kids the truth, critical thinking, problem solving, looking at multiple sources.” After the meeting, Lateef said he hoped some of the aggression that the board’s faced the last two meetings would subside. “I would ask the public to understand that we have serious business in restarting the school year with in-person learning. We have truly serious business about making sure we get it right and doing everything the best we can. We have really serious business about making sure our people stay safe and don’t get sick in the schools,” he said.
