Fairfax County Public Schools

Union Urges Fairfax County Teachers to Take ‘Mental Health Day' Wednesday

NBC Universal, Inc. For the first time since March, some students head back into Fairfax County Public Schools as a pilot program with concurrent learning begins Monday. Students in schools and at home will get the same live instruction. “It’s kind of an experiment,” county Federation of Teachers President Tina Williams told News4’s Justin Finch. “Lives are at stake.”

A teachers' union in Virginia's largest school district is urging members to call in sick Wednesday for a “mental health day” as they ponder how they will respond to a gradual return to in-person learning.

Fairfax Education Association President Kimberly Adams said teachers need the mental health day because of the stress they face with a looming Oct. 30 deadline to say whether they will return to the classroom when called upon, seek a leave of absence or resign.

“We are drawing a line by protecting our members,” she said.

The union has urged that school remain fully virtual for the entire 2020-21 school year because of safety concerns related to the coronavirus pandemic. It represents about 4,000 teachers and staff in the Fairfax County school system — the nation's 10th largest — which employs almost 25,000.

The vast majority of Fairfax County Public Schools' 187,000 students are currently attending fully virtual classes. Superintendent Scott Brabrand has outlined a plan that would have students return in stages through late January to two days a week of in-school learning.

He has accelerated the timeline slightly on request from the school board, which has asked him to come up with an even earlier timetable.

Copyright AP - Associated Press
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