Letter to Mitch McConnell, Senate Majority Leader; Charles Schumer, Senate Minority Leader; Nancy Pelosi, Speaker of the House; and Kevin McCarthy, House Minority Leader - Wittman fights to protect educators in next COVID-19 relief package

Letter

Date: July 28, 2020
Location: Washington, DC
Issues: Education Legal

Dear Leaders McConnell and Schumer and Speaker Pelosi and Leader McCarthy:

I am writing today to urge you to include temporary and targeted liability protections for academic institutions related to the COVID-19 pandemic in the upcoming coronavirus relief package. While these protections are likely necessary for many sectors of the American economy, my request focuses on the need to safeguard schools, administrators, and teachers from excessive and unnecessary lawsuits arising out of the COVID-19 pandemic.

As a public health official for over 25 years, I am well versed to evaluate public health risks and balance those risks with the educational well-being of our students. We must be able to balance the public health risks and the danger of continuing to shutter our schools. In order to accomplish this, school board members, superintendents, administrators and teachers need to have the confidence that they will not face legal repercussions if they adhere to the proper precautions. Moreover, we must ensure that potential protections do not protect those who are acting with willful misconduct or negligence.

Inclusion of targeted liability protections for schools would provide an additional protective measure and serve as an important step toward ensuring that our country's schools and all employees are reassured to return to the mission of educating children without fear of legal ramifications.

Local school districts and their faculty and staff would be among the largest beneficiaries of laser-focused COVID-19 liability protections. It is critical that we put in place the necessary protections for those entities and people serving on the educational front lines, so long as schools follow their individual State's and the Center for Disease Control's health guidelines. However, the protections should not apply if transmission was caused by an act or omission on the part of the school constituting willful or criminal misconduct, gross negligence, reckless misconduct, or a conscious flagrant indifference to the rights or safety of covered individuals. Liability protections for schools are paramount as we enter back-to-school season. Inclusion protects academic institutions from lawsuits and unbearable economic penalties arising from students, employees, and visitors who may risk contracting and transmitting COVID-19. Furthermore, I urge the sunset of these protections after five years, until the beginning of 2025.

In the past, Congress has come together to pass timely and targeted liability protections with strong bipartisan support because members understood the economic threat of lawsuits at moments of intense economic vulnerability. While Congress has acted to provide some limited COVID-19 related liability protections for healthcare providers and some manufacturers of Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) in the CARES Act, more needs to be done to protect schools. I urge the inclusion of liability protections for academic institutions and their employees, as we move to safely return our students to in-classroom instruction. Thank you for your consideration.

Sincerely,


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