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Wednesday, April 26, 2023

Weingarten, teacher’s union helped coordinate CDC’s 2021 school reopening guidance: records

 The American Federation of Teachers was more deeply involved with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s school reopening guidance from February 2021 than previously known, emails and documents seen by The Post show.

Powerful AFT boss Randi Weingarten spoke twice by phone with CDC Director Rochelle Walensky in the week leading up to the Feb. 12, 2021, announcement that halted full re-opening of in-person classes — including the day before the guidance was released, according to records obtained by the conservative watchdog Americans for Public Trust.

AFT and its fellow union, the National Education Association, also asked the White House and CDC for help shaping its press strategy to show the rank-and-file they and the Biden administration were on the same page, emails reveal.

The extent of the unions’ role in government policy was revealed the day before Weingarten is set to face a House select subcommittee hearing about the effects of school closures on America’s kids.

The records show Walensky took a call from Weingarten on Feb. 7, 2021, five days before the CDC released its “Operational Strategy for K-12 Schools Through Phased Mitigation.”

The same day, then-White House associate director of public engagement William McIntee emailed then-CDC Chief of Staff Sherri Berger, letting her know the AFT and NEA had “a few comms-related questions” about a planned meeting between union educators and Walensky set for Feb. 8.

Randi Weingarten
“Randi Weingarten colluded with the Biden administration to put politics over science, threatening the wellbeing of children,” said APT Executive Director Caitlin Sutherland.
Getty Images

“They’d like to tweet ahead of the meeting to say something to the gist of ‘The CDC has invited a group of AFT/NEA teachers to meet with the Director on safe school reopening this Monday. What information would you like our members to relay to the CDC Director in the meeting?'” McIntee wrote.

His next request read: “They’d like to coordinate on a readout press release after the meeting. They are battling stories being written that unions and the Administration are locking heads over the safe school reopening plan, so they think it would be helpful for there to be a positive readout of the meeting from both sides afterwards.”

The last request from the unions via McIntee was more prosaic: “They’d like to be able to either tweet during or after about the meeting.”

CDC Director Rochelle Walensky had a phone call with Weingarten on Feb. 7, 2021.
CDC Director Rochelle Walensky had a phone call with Weingarten on Feb. 7, 2021.

Another email from the evening of Feb. 11, 2021, reveals the CDC following up with Weingarten and NEA President Becky Pringle after each had phone calls with Walensky the night before the guidance came out.

“As she [Walensky] indicated, we would like to schedule time tomorrow late morning for a follow up discussion with CDC’s technical experts on our forthcoming [guidance],” wrote CDC official Christopher Jones.

“I have copied colleagues from CDC who can help set up the meeting … Looking forward to the discussion!”

A White House email with members of the CDC sent Feb. 7, 2021.
A White House email with members of the CDC sent Feb. 7, 2021.

“Randi Weingarten colluded with the Biden administration to put politics over science, threatening the wellbeing of children,” APT Executive Director Caitlin Sutherland told The Post.

“Her multiple calls, emails, and non-scientific recommendations to CDC Director Rochelle Walensky and her team illustrate the level of dark money influence that was allowed to shape school reopening policies.

“While both Walensky and Weingarten have tried to mislead the public, their emails and phone logs tell the real story.

“Congress must stand up for the American people and get answers from Weingarten at this hearing to ensure she is finally held accountable.”

A press secretary for Walenksy told The Post that the CDC as “part of long-standing best practices”: “sought input from 14 organizations with an interest in the implementation and applicability of the guidance,” including the National Governors Association, the Association of State and Territorial Health Officials, the Association of Public Health Laboratories, the Council of State and Territorial Epidemiologists, the National Association of County and City Health Officials, the Council of Chief State School Officers, the National Association of School Nurses, the National Association of School Boards, the National School Board Association, the National Association of State Boards of Education, the National Education Association, the School Superintendents Association, the Los Angeles County Health Department and the American Federation of Teachers.

“These collaborative conversations resulted in nearly two-thirds of schools returning to full, in-person learning by May 2021, which was up from less than half in January 2021. Schools offering full, remote learning dropped from 23 percent in January 2021 to 2 percent in May 2021, which demonstrated the confidence school districts had in the guidance to keep students and staff safely in classes,” the press secretary said.

“The strength of this guidance resulted in 99 percent of schools being open and children being in the enriching environment of a classroom during the delta surge in the fall of 2021.”

The White House did not respond to a request for comment. A spokesperson for AFT declined comment.

In her prepared testimony, Weingarten will say Wednesday’s hearing is based on a “faulty premise.”

“Any claim that the contact the AFT had with the CDC was unusual or inappropriate, particularly in reviewing its February 2021 Operational Strategy, is simply wrong,” she says.

The Post previously revealed that AFT suggested language for the CDC’s reopening guidelines — including providing remote work opportunities for any teachers who claimed to suffer higher risks of COVID-19 or have a high-risk “household member,” and giving the option of shutting down in-person learning for students in communities deemed to have high COVID transmission levels.

An email the CDC sent to AFT President Randi Weingarten, following up on a phone call with Walensky.
An email the CDC sent to AFT President Randi Weingarten, following up on a phone call with Walensky.

In one email from Feb. 1, 2021 that was forwarded to Walensky, AFT senior director for health issues Kelly Trautner described the CDC as the union’s “thought partner.”

“We are immensely grateful for your genuine desire to earn our confidence and your commitment to partnership,” Trautner said in another email to Walensky two days later.

Some of the emails initially obtained by Americans for Public Trust had been redacted, forcing the group to sue the CDC to release the additional records.

Michael Bromwich, a lawyer for Weingarten, maintained in a letter last week to the select subcommittee that AFT’s role in providing suggestions for reopening were “limited and wholly appropriate.”

He mentioned “a handful of other concerns discussed orally with the CDC,” but provided no further information — choosing only to describe one conference call the agency had with Weingarten and senior AFT staff in January 2021.

classroom
Weingarten’s lawyer said in a letter last week that the union leader’s actions were “wholly appropriate.”
Getty Images

“During the call, the AFT promised to send the CDC proposed language to consider related to accommodations for high-risk educators and staff, which a senior AFT staff member sent to the CDC on February 1, 2021,” Bromwich wrote. 

“The suggestion that the AFT played a major role in revising and editing the Operational Strategy is wildly exaggerated. In fact, the AFT’s role was extremely limited. It proposed changes that amounted to a few sentences in a 38-page document,” he added. 

Subcommittee Chairman Brad Wenstrup (R-Ohio), who is a doctor himself, said in a March letter to AFT and 14 other groups that the House panel was “concerned about the potential for undue influence of non-governmental groups on CDC scientific guidance,” adding that AFT “is a political union, not a professional scientific or medical organization.”

Brad Wenstrup
Select Subcommittee Chairman Brad Wenstrup (R-Ohio) sent a letter in March to Weingarten requesting more details about school closures.
AP

Weingarten stayed in touch with Walensky in the months after the school memo to discuss further issues related to reopening, with additional documents showing they both requested meetings of the other on March 17 and April 9 of the same year, respectively.

AFT, which has about 1.7 million members, donated more than $2.3 million to Democratic candidates during the 2022 election cycle, according to the political donation tracking website OpenSecrets.

https://nypost.com/2023/04/25/teacher-unions-had-bigger-hand-in-cdc-school-reopening-plan/

Vermont school removes ‘male,’ ‘female’ terms from reproductive system lessons

 A Vermont elementary school says it will no longer use the words “male” or “female” when teaching fifth-grade students about puberty and human reproductive systems.

Families of students at Founders Memorial School received a letter on April 20 informing them of the changes to the science and health curriculum.

The changes reflect the district’s desire to use “gender inclusive language,” Principal Sara Jablonski wrote in the letter.

“In an effort to align our curriculum with our equity policy, teachers will be using gender inclusive language throughout this unit. With any differences, we strive to use ‘person-first’ language as best practice,” Jablonski wrote.

Instead of referring to a person as a “boy” or “male,” teachers will say “person who produces sperm.” Likewise, they will no longer say “girl” or “female” but “person who produces eggs.”

The Essex Westford School District noted in the letter that teachers were working on editing worksheets to reflect the new changes.

While teaching students about the human body, the district said it will focus on “the physical and emotional changes that occur during puberty and briefly introduce the basic structure and function of human reproductive systems.”

letter
The changes reflect the district’s desire to use “gender inclusive language,” principal Sara Jablonski wrote.
Twitter / @esanzi

Parents and guardians interested in viewing the materials themselves were told a binder containing the handouts can be found in the school’s main office.

The director of outreach for parents’ rights group Parents Defending Education shared the letter on Twitter.

“New language rules just dropped for 5th graders in Vermont and they don’t include the words boy and girl or male and female,” wrote Erika Sanzi.

letter
The letter, shared to Twitter by Parents Defending Education, received mixed reviews.

Parents Defending Education did not immediately return a request for comment from The Post on Wednesday morning, but the group blasted the change in a statement to Fox News Digital.

“Speaking about anyone in this way is dehumanizing in any context but these new language rules specifically apply to a health unit for 5th graders about puberty and reproduction,” a spokesperson for the group said.

“It is clear that the school has decided to be derelict in their duty to educate students in the name of equity. If anyone is wondering what it looks like when an elementary school has been captured by gender ideology, this is it.”

Students walk into Founders Memorial School
The school district adopted a new equity policy in 2021.
Founders Memorial School

The letter received mixed reactions on Twitter, with some users comparing the practice to Aldous Huxley’s 1932 novel “Brave New World” while others called for students to be pulled from public schools.

“Absurd. A person who produces sperm is, by definition, a male. A person who produces eggs is, by definition, a female,” one Twitter user wrote. “And sex is not ‘assigned’ at birth, it’s observed at birth. How exhausting all this nonsense is.”

The Essex Westford School District’s school board adopted a new equity policy in June 2021, under which schools would “use anti-racist and LGBTQIA+ affirming perspectives to inform curriculum decisions starting in Pre-K,” the Burlington Free-Press reported at the time.

The Essex Westford School District noted in the letter that teachers were working on editing worksheets to reflect the new changes.
dpa/picture alliance via Getty Images

The policy passed in an 8-1 vote.

The Essex Westford School District did not reply to a request for comment from The Post Wednesday morning.

https://nypost.com/2023/04/26/vermont-school-removes-male-female-terms-from-reproductive-system-lessons/

8 bodies in Cancun resort as drug cartel violence rages

 The bodies of eight people were found dumped in the Mexican resort of Cancun, one of the country’s most popular tourism destinations, authorities said Tuesday.

The bodies were discovered over the weekend about 10 miles from Cancun’s beach and hotel zone after police launched a coordinated effort to search for missing people in wooded lots and even sinkhole ponds, also known as cenotes, Mexican authorities said.

Oscar Montes de Oca, the head prosecutor of the Caribbean coast state of Quintana Roo said five of the bodies were found at an abandoned construction site.

Three were subsequently identified as previously reported missing people.

Three sets of skeletal remains were discovered at a separate site in a wooded area on the outskirts of Cancun near a poor neighborhood, close to the resort’s airport, authorities said.

They have not yet been identified.

Montes de Oca said authorities estimated the bodies were dumped there between one week and two months ago.

According to the government, more than 112,000 people are listed as missing throughout the country.

Police said the bodies were found over the weekend about 10 miles from Cancun's beach and hotel zone.
Police said the bodies were found over the weekend about 10 miles from Cancun’s beach and hotel zone.
AFP via Getty Images

While crimes are more common in other areas of the country, Cancun and other resorts were typically regarded as safe travel destinations.

Drug cartels have begun disposing of the bodies of their victims in clandestine body dumping grounds, especially as several cartels fight for control of the Caribbean coast and its drug trade.

Authorities carried out similar searches in Felipe Carrillo Puerto, which is about 140 miles south of Cancun.

Members of the Mexican Navy and National Guard patrol the tourist beach area of Cancun, Quintana Roo state, Mexico on March 18, 2023.
Members of the Mexican Navy and National Guard patrol the tourist beach area of Cancun, Quintana Roo state, Mexico on March 18, 2023.
AFP via Getty Images

Volunteers, including the relatives of missing people, assisted investigators in the searches.

Search dogs were also used.

Earlier this month, four men were killed in Cancun following a dispute related to drug gang activity.

There are more than 112,000 people listed as missing throughout Mexico, according to the government.
There are more than 112,000 people listed as missing throughout Mexico, according to the government.
Getty Images

The dead men were found in the city’s hotel zone near the beach.

A US tourist was also shot in the leg in the nearby town of Puerto Morelos in March.

Cancun remains the top destination for Americans vacationing in Mexico.

The US State Department issued travel guidance last month that warns travelers to “exercise increased caution,” especially near resorts like Cancun, Playa del Carmen, and Tulum anytime after dark.

In 2022, two Canadians were killed in Playa del Carmen, which is about 40 miles south of Cancun.

In 2021, in the town of Tulum — about 80 miles south of Cancun — two foreign tourists including one American and one German were killed when they were apparently caught by gunfire from rival drug dealers.

https://nypost.com/2023/04/26/mexico-authorities-find-8-bodies-in-cancun-resort-as-drug-cartel-violence-rages/