Response to the Changes?
The District of Columbia’s Nurses Association stands against the cluster model, promoting a petition to stop the change. They claim that these changes coming from the Children’s School Services (CSS) and the District of Columbia Department of Health (DOH) prioritize “profits over student health by implementing downsizing measures that compromise quality healthcare services in schools.”
This complaint concerns the hiring of health technicians, who have fewer qualifications than nurses and lower wages. D.C. councilmember Christina Henderson says that this year, there are about 96 full-time nurses and 88 health technicians across 184 schools compared to last year when 102 of the 183 schools had at least one full-time nurse.
However, Henderson also states that having a full-time nurse at every school for 40 hours a week has never been a reality. Instead, this program “will deliver quality care to our young people and provide a level of consistency that our schools have been asking for.”
These changes come alongside an 11% increase to the district’s total budget, splitting $2.2 billion between public and public charter schools. This puts D.C.’s spending per student in the top 15 across all states in the U.S.
Mary Hines, a D.C. school nurse, speaks to both sides of the issue. On the one hand, she believes that the CSS needs to focus on long-term solutions to this shortage or at least involve current staff in the decision–making. On the other hand, she laments the difficulty in keeping nurses working in schools.
The average nurse in D.C. makes $150,000 a year compared to the average school nurse, who makes $61,112 a year. Nationwide, nurses in other healthcare facilities earn 15.8% more than the average school nurse. Hines has been a nurse for over 50 years and working in schools for more than 20 years, but she still makes less than $100,000 a year.
D.C.’s Nurses Association urges the CSS and DOH to collaborate with a nurse representative and reconsider the cluster model in favor of a solution that works “towards a solution that ensures every school has a dedicated nurse who can provide the highest standard of care to our students.”
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