Committee recommends creating new school nurse classification

Dr. Nicole Leapley on Dec. 21, 2022. Photo/Andrew Sylvia

MANCHESTER, N.H. โ€“ The Manchester Board of School Committee (BOSC) Policy Committee met on Wednesday night for their last meeting of 2022, making a set of decisions before reconvening in the new year.

The committee recommended a proposed policy that effectively split the Manchester School Districtโ€™s nurses into two separate categories.

This split came due to a fairly new state law requiring school nurses to hold certifications from the New Hampshire Department of Education, with those certifications requiring bachelorโ€™s degrees. However, that requirement only comes into play with employees holding the title of โ€œschool nurse,โ€ leading other districts across the state to refer to nurses with experience as registered nurses or licensed nursing assistants but not certifications as something other than a โ€œschool nurseโ€ even though they play that role.

The new โ€œSchool Nurse Iโ€ position would consist of these non-certified, but otherwise qualified nurses, with those meeting the school nurse requirements under the state law now being placed within the โ€œSchool Nurse IIโ€ job title.

Three nurses that were already with the school district prior to the law but who did not meet the requirements would be grandfathered into the second tier.

Until this school year, school nurses at Manchesterโ€™s public schools were not employees of the district, but employees of the cityโ€™s Health Department contracted to the district.

Ward 11 BOSC Member Dr. Nicole Leapley expressed frustration with the law, stating that it made it more expensive to become a school nurse given the extra level of education needed, which then raises salary requirements that school districts must pay. She also expressed frustration with that added tier of requirements posed by the state when the district still faces a shortage of nurses.

Individuals employed in the โ€œSchool Nurse Iโ€ category would be given assistance by the district toward eventually obtaining a bachelorโ€™s degree and certification from the state.

Another proposed amendment to the Manchester School Districtโ€™s attendance policy was sent back to administration after concerns that some reorganization was needed.

The amendments modified language related to truancy, with additional language relating to absences on remote learning days and updates to interventions for students identified as frequently truant.

Regarding the remote learning day absence addition, students would be expected to participate in assigned work for the day either online or through paper materials that can be submitted at a later date.

Leapley and Ward 2 BOSC Member Sean Parr felt that the wording of the new policy should be modified in areas to provide additional clarity. Leapley also asked that parents and students be involved in the crafting of the policy change given the feedback she has received from students on the topic of absences during remote learning days.


 


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