CHANDLER LOOKS TO 2021
COVID CLAIMS POPULAR MUSICIAN
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INSIDE This Week
BUSINESS .................... 23 Chandler woman's beauty industry niche.
SPORTS .........................24 Old Chandler rivals meet in Fiesta Bowl.
GET OUT ......................26 Chandler Film Festival ready to roll.
NEWS ....................................... 2 COMMUNITY ...................... 20 BUSINESS ..............................23 SPORTS..................................24 GET OUT .............................. 26 CLASSIFIEDS .........................27
JANUARY 10, 2021
COVID-19 continues roiling Chandler school debate BY KEVIN REAGAN Arizonan Staff Writer
C
handler Unified School District officials say they’re “disgusted” by community members who have been willfully violating COVID-19 protocols by attending large gatherings and not wearing masks – enough so that they decided to temporarily shut down campuses for two weeks. Days after a video showing students throwing a massive New Year’s Eve party at a Gilbert residence began circulating online, the CUSD Governing Board held a last-
minute meeting Jan. 4 before the start of the spring semester to cancel all in-classroom instruction until Jan. 19. The district’s 45,000 students must now learn virtually from home, just as they did at the start of last semester. The sudden decision angered some parents and relieved many others. But it was Prior to the Chandler Unified Governing Board meeting Jan. 4, teachers like Katie Nash and parents favoring virtual learning perceived as a quick remedy held a vehicle parade to support the board. (Pablo Robes/Arizonan Photographer)
Mandatory COVID shots for Better days ahead teachers called possible
see SCHOOLS page 10
BY CECILIA CHAN AND PAUL MARYNIAK Arizonan News Staff
A
s teachers inch toward the head of the line to receive a COVID-19 vaccine, it begs the question: can school districts mandate inoculations? According to the Arizona School Risk Retention Trust, yes. “School districts may require employees to be vaccinated against COVID-19 as a condition of on-site work, subject to exemptions required by state and/or federal law,” reads a legal memo prepared for the nonprofit Trust and circulated late last month to its member districts. The Trust, which provides more than 250 public school districts and community colleges with property and liability insurance, also advised districts to consult with their own attorneys on legal issues related to any vaccination requirement.
see VACCINES page 12
Ryan Butler wants to start playing his guitar again but for now he still is recovering after a liver transplant, something that has made 2021 looking much better than his future appeared last year. See page 20. (Special to the Arizonan)
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