St Vincent PM outlines terms for rehiring unvaccinated workers

The Government of St Vincent and the Grenadines says it is now willing to rehire public sector workers who lost their jobs last year after failing to take a COVID-19 vaccine, as required by law.

In making the announcement Thursday, Prime Minister Dr Ralph Gonsalves said that Cabinet received advice from Chief Medical Officer, Dr Simone Keizer-Beache.

He said that following a briefing from health officials including Medical Officer of Health, Dr Roger Duncan, Cabinet agreed on a “new regime” which will be drafted into law by the chambers of Attorney General Jaundy Martin.

“I want to make it plain that this is not the reinstatement of teachers. This is not a question of an automatic reinstatement of teachers because to say it is an automatic reinstatement of teachers would be to suggest that the teachers were not legally, constitutionally out of their jobs because they did not choose to take the vaccine and follow the requirement,” Gonsalves said.

“And clearly they expressed an interest in employment as teachers. Those who had not followed the requirement and, therefore, had abandoned their jobs under the law, they would be required to follow the conditions, including periodic testing,” the prime minister said.

He said vaccination and booster shots will remain a requirement for existing and new health care workers.

“But there is a principle which is applied called a layered approach, the police, people at the Port Authority and relevant public servants defined in the regulation, for employment, the vaccine will not be required,” the prime minister said.

Instead, the regime will focus on face masks, hand sanitisation, spacing and ventilation.

“But, it will have built in the system the vaccine advocacy programme, still encouraging people to take the vaccine because it is still the best defence,” Gonsalves said.

He said that teachers and other adult staff in learning institutions will have to adhere strictly to a number of measures.

“For unvaccinated teachers and other adult staff, 100% mask, spacing between cohorts, strict cohorting — cohorting meaning if you are in the same — you all stick together,” he said.

He noted that children might mix during breaks, but added that there must be strict cohorting during class time.

The prime minister said there must be proper ventilation at education institutions as well as a testing regime to stay on the job.

He said that the Health Services Subcommittee of the National Emergency Management Organisation (NEMO) would determine the screening regime.

“And in this layered approach, there will be no requirement to be 100% vaccinated. Of course, we are going to encourage the vaccination and hope to get 100%.

“For those persons who …under the regulation had abandoned their jobs by not following the requirement, the new epidemiological situation has occasioned an altered regime,” Gonsalves said.

He said that those persons who are interested in employment “who had chosen to not follow the requirement … they will have to write to the Ministry of Education, they will make the announcement, to indicate whether you want to be employed for the new period and the ministry and the Chief Personnel Office make the announcement as to what period.”

The prime minister said that he suspects that the period would be short, “probably a week or thereabout.

“I am giving an advance notice because the truth is this: that we have to staff the schools for the new term and we have to get on with that.”

He said that the Cabinet has also agreed that for people who are employed and are unvaccinated, say in teaching, the state will pay for the first four sets of tests.

“Thereafter, it will be your responsibility. But the Health Service Subcommittee of NEMO will set out the testing regime. They are discussing it at the moment,” he said.

He said some teachers have said they are not willing to take a COVID-19 test as part of their employment requirement.

“Well, if you are not going to take a test, how can you get employment? Even though the epidemiological situation is less serious now than at the time of the requirement …we are still under a public health emergency and we still have the problem of COVID,” Gonsalves said.
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