Anonymous wrote:If you're taking a leave of absence, then you're not an active teacher. Those individuals can get in line with their same aged cohort. They shouldn't jump in front of high risk seniors.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The only teachers I know that are taking a LOA are doing it for childcare reasons. Also it's unpaid. They've decided that childcare would be too expensive vs their salary so they are staying home with their kids. It have nothing to do with vaccines.
Did they get a vaccine before giving notice?
We need teachers vaccinated. We need virtual teachers vaccinated. We need hybrid teachers vaccinated. We need teachers returning at a later date vaccinated.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Again, I'm pretty sure anyone taking LOA right now is in violation of contract. Wasn't the LOA deadline back in October sometime?
LOL at you. Like the need for a LOA only occurs to a rigid timeline!!! Not. In my organization people put in LOAs when they need them. Of course the same should hold true for teachers.
Family crises or the need to take time away from work to deal with urgent issues isn't normally scheduled. That's why emergencies are called...wait for it...emergencies. And that's why the LOA process exists.
If a teacher needs to put in for a LOA then he or she should. It is a normal part of business and a school system is no different than any other business in that regard.
Sorry no. Outside of FMLA and ADA, teachers can’t just take LOA whenever they want and keep their job for when they return. That’s not how it works in the public school system. You sound like you are not a teacher.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Again, I'm pretty sure anyone taking LOA right now is in violation of contract. Wasn't the LOA deadline back in October sometime?
LOL at you. Like the need for a LOA only occurs to a rigid timeline!!! Not. In my organization people put in LOAs when they need them. Of course the same should hold true for teachers.
Family crises or the need to take time away from work to deal with urgent issues isn't normally scheduled. That's why emergencies are called...wait for it...emergencies. And that's why the LOA process exists.
If a teacher needs to put in for a LOA then he or she should. It is a normal part of business and a school system is no different than any other business in that regard.
Anonymous wrote:Again, I'm pretty sure anyone taking LOA right now is in violation of contract. Wasn't the LOA deadline back in October sometime?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:'Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Again, I'm pretty sure anyone taking LOA right now is in violation of contract. Wasn't the LOA deadline back in October sometime?
Emerging risks have to be accommodated. That could be a new diagnosis or worsening disease activity.
Are you thinking of ADA instead of LOA?
Nope. If Teacher A was diagnosed with cancer last week, they still qualify for the FMLA leave. The school system can’t say too bad you weren’t diagnosed before our deadline last fall. Same with Teacher B that already had Type 2 diabetes last fall but worsened to stage 3 kidney disease in the past month.
Anonymous wrote:'Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Again, I'm pretty sure anyone taking LOA right now is in violation of contract. Wasn't the LOA deadline back in October sometime?
Emerging risks have to be accommodated. That could be a new diagnosis or worsening disease activity.
Are you thinking of ADA instead of LOA?
Anonymous wrote:'Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Again, I'm pretty sure anyone taking LOA right now is in violation of contract. Wasn't the LOA deadline back in October sometime?
Emerging risks have to be accommodated. That could be a new diagnosis or worsening disease activity.
Are you thinking of ADA instead of LOA?
'Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Again, I'm pretty sure anyone taking LOA right now is in violation of contract. Wasn't the LOA deadline back in October sometime?
Emerging risks have to be accommodated. That could be a new diagnosis or worsening disease activity.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The only teachers I know that are taking a LOA are doing it for childcare reasons. Also it's unpaid. They've decided that childcare would be too expensive vs their salary so they are staying home with their kids. It have nothing to do with vaccines.
Did they get a vaccine before giving notice?
We need teachers vaccinated. We need virtual teachers vaccinated. We need hybrid teachers vaccinated. We need teachers returning at a later date vaccinated.
If you're talking about things we need, we need for teachers not to quit in March. Vaccinated or unvaccinated. But we don't get what we need, do we?
I'm confused. All year parents on DCUM have been frothing at the mouth screaming IF YOU WON'T GO BACK IN PERSON THEN QUIT! OMG! A TOTALLY UNQUALIFIED WARM BODY IN PERSON IS BETTER THAN AN EXPERIENCED REMOTE TEACHER.
DCUM parents now: OMG What do you MEAAAAN you're quitting?!?!?
Exactly. They're getting what they wanted. Too bad so sad. Not.
No, I'm glad that teachers who don't want to teach are quitting. Sorry "taking leave". They should have done that before getting the vaccine. But at least they've finally gotten around to quitting, which they should have done earlier.
Anonymous wrote:Again, I'm pretty sure anyone taking LOA right now is in violation of contract. Wasn't the LOA deadline back in October sometime?
Anonymous wrote:Again, I'm pretty sure anyone taking LOA right now is in violation of contract. Wasn't the LOA deadline back in October sometime?
Anonymous wrote:Well that's their right but unfortunately many are working while feeling very uncomfortable. At least they have an option for a leave of absence. Some "essential workers" don't have that option.
What school system is this in?
Anonymous wrote:So one school has two teachers that are taking LOAs, and this is supposed to be a crisis?