LETTER: Parent Urges School Committee to Mandate COVID Vaccinations

Dear School Committee,

As far as I’m aware, Watertown has not yet announced a policy for COVID vaccination in schools. I’m writing today to urge you to adopt a mandate as many other jurisdictions are now doing. COVID vaccines are safe and effective, and are by far the most effective way to prevent COVID outbreaks in our schools and keep our teachers and students safe. I got vaccinated at the first opportunity and will get my children vaccinated as soon as they are eligible. 

Masks, ventilation, social distancing, and testing can help, but there is a limit to what ventilation can do, and in many ways masks, social distancing, and testing are far more burdensome than getting a vaccine because the vaccine is two doses at single points in time, whereas masks and social distancing restrict what people can do every single day. It seems incongruous to mandate the less effective, more burdensome intervention, while leaving the more effective, less burdensome intervention up to the individual.

Watertown Residents Can Dispose of Medical Sharps at Upcoming Collection Event

The following announcement was provided by the Watertown Health Department:

Household sharps collection will take place on Saturday, August 14, 2021 9:00 a.m. – noon at 149 Main Street, Watertown Town Hall Parking Lot at Rear of Building. Watertown Residents may bring the following items on collection days: Used Needles, syringes, and lancets, stored in sturdy puncture proof containers. Unused capped needles, syringes and lancets in original packaging. Unused EpiPen’s in original containers. Locked sharps containers.

Court Finds Watertown Company Violated Fair Labor Standards, Retaliated Against Employee

The following announcement was provided by the U.S. Department of Labor:

An employee who worked for two Massachusetts construction contractors was within his rights when he complained to his supervisor about not receiving overtime pay and requested the wages he was due. The two companies responded with a campaign of retaliation, pressuring the worker to withdraw his overtime complaint. They convinced other individuals to follow and threaten the worker’s family, and told other employees they might lose their jobs because the worker requested overtime pay that was legally due. An investigation by the U.S. Department of Labor’s Wage and Hour Division found that the contractors’ actions violated the anti-retaliation provisions of the Fair Labor Standards Act. The department’s Office of the Solicitor filed suit against the defendants and obtained a temporary restraining order in the U.S. District Court for the District of Massachusetts in October of 2020.

Watertown Church Welcomes New Priest, Returns to In-Person Services

The Rev. Andrew Goldhor and former Good Shepherd Deacon the Rev. Ken Schmidt offer outdoor communion on Easter, April 4, while services were still being held remotely. The Church of the Good Shepherd provided the following piece:

On July 18th the Church of the Good Shepherd held its first in-person worship service since the pandemic began. The Reverend Andrew Goldhor officiated at the service, which included communion and was characterized by mask-wearing, socially distanced seating, and humming to hymns rather than singing. 

Rev. Goldhor, who prefers to be called Andrew, was appointed Priest-in-Change at Good Shepherd in October of 2020. He succeeds The Very Rev. Amy McCreath, who left Good Shepherd in 2018 to accept the position of Dean of the Cathedral Church of St. Paul in Boston. Andrew has been leading Zoom services at 10 am on Sundays since his arrival. Current in-person services are also streamed online and can be found at www.goodshepherdwatertown.org.

Art of Problem Solving Academy Hosting Open House at Nearby Center

The following announcement was provided by AoPS Academy Lexington:

Is your advanced student looking to get ahead this year? AoPS Academy Lexington is opening the doors for in-person learning for the first time! AoPS Academy trains the innovative thinkers of tomorrow, combining a world-class math and language arts curriculum with small class sizes to help advanced students build critical problem-solving skills early. After successfully running online classes for a year, we can’t wait to meet our problem-solving community.  

To show off our learning center, we’re holding an open house event on Tuesday, August 31st from 9:00 am to 7:00 pm at 1088 Lexington Street, Waltham, MA 02451. During the event, families can meet the Director team, discuss our courses, and more! We require that all attendees please wear a mask and practice social distancing while indoors, as children under the age of 12 are still not able to be vaccinated at this time.   

Visit lexington.aopsacademy.org to see our course catalog and learn more. You can contact us with questions at 781-472-1200 or lexington@aopsacademy.org.