Situational Update for February 18, 2021
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Thursday, February 18, 2021 2 Be vigilant and call (202) 399-7093 to request transportation for neighbors in need of shelter from the cold. February 18, 2021 EMERGENCY UTILITY CONTACTS 3 Washington Gas DC Water Pepco Outages: Emergency Line: Emergencies: 1-877-737-2662 Call 911 or 844- 202-612-3400 or Text your outage: § Text “ADD OUTAGE” to 48710 WASHGAS (844- send a tweet to § Then, text “OUT” to 48710 § Get updates by texting “STAT” 927-4427) @dcwater to 48710 February 18, 2021 NEW ELIGIBLE POPULATIONS 4 Beginning today, the following populations are now eligible for the vaccine: individuals who work in a individuals who work in grocery store setting manufacturing health and human services and individuals who work in food social services outreach workers packaging February 18, 2021 VACCINE DISTRIBUTION 5 DC IS NOW VACCINATING: As of 2/17/21 § Individuals who work in health § Individuals experiencing § Licensed Child Care Providers & care settings* homelessness Teachers and Staff of § Members of the Fire and § Members of the Metropolitan Independent Schools in DC Emergency Medical Services Police Department § Grocery Store Workers* Department § Teachers and staff who are, or § Health and human services and § Residents of long-term and will be, working in person at a social services outreach workers* intermediate care facilities and DCPS school or a DC public residents of community charter school § Individuals working in residential facilities/group homes manufacturing* § Department of Corrections § DC residents who are 65 years old Employees & Residents § Individuals working in food and older* packaging* § Continuity of Government *populations that are able to make appointments through Operations personnel vaccinate.dc.gov or by calling the Coronavirus Call Center (when appointments are available) February 18, 2021 VACCINE DISTRIBUTION 6 Today, at 6:00 p.m., approximately 2,450 appointments will become available to DC residents who live in priority zip codes and are 65 years old or older and/or are members of an eligible workforce group. Priority zip codes are focused on On Friday, February 19 at 6:00 p.m., DC Health will Wards 5, 7, and 8 and include: make approximately 2,450 additional appointments available for all District residents who are 65 years of age and older and/or individuals § 20422 § 20001 who are members of an eligible workforce group. § 20011 § 20019 § 20017 § 20020 Go online: vaccinate.dc.gov § 20018 § 20032 If you do not have internet access, call: 855-363-0333 § 20002 § 20593 February 18, 2021 CALL CENTER HOURS 7 FEBRUARY 15, 2021 - FEBRUARY 21, 2021 Call 855-363- 0333 February 18, 2021 VACCINE DISTRIBUTION 8 Special Initiatives (as of 2/15/21) Initiative Number Vaccinated Vaccinator DCPS Staff 2,980 Children’s National Charter School Staff, Child Care Providers, & 4,317 One Medical Independent School Staff MPD Staff 1,123 Kaiser DOC Staff N/A Kaiser Senior Housing 927 Johns Hopkins Homeless Congregate Care Settings 723 Unity Department of Corrections Residents 100 Unity Home Health Aides Access 120 UMC DDS and DBH Intermediate Care and Community 360 Independent Pharmacies; Giant Residential Facilities Senior Vaccine Buddies 301 (registered) Safeway Faith-Based Initiative 140 Mary’s Center/Five Medicine February 18, 2021 MEDICAL CONDITIONS 9 The week of March 1, DC will begin Phase 1C Tier 1 and the following populations will become eligible for the vaccine: DC Residents who are 16-64 years old with qualifying medical conditions. February 18, 2021 MEDICAL CONDITIONS 10 Qualifying Phase 1C Tier 1 Medical Conditions § Asthma, Chronic Obstructive § Diabetes Mellitus § Liver Disease Pulmonary Disease (COPD), § Heart Conditions, such as § Neurologic Conditions and other Chronic Lung Heart Failure, Coronary Artery Disease Obesity, BMI ≥ 30 kg/m2 Disease, or Cardiomyopathies § § Bone Marrow and Solid Organ § Pregnancy HIV Transplantation § § Severe Genetic Disorders § Hypertension § Cancer § Sickle Cell Disease § Immunocompromised State § Cerebrovascular Disease § Thalassemia § Inherited Metabolic Disorders § Chronic Kidney Disease § Intellectual and Developmental § Congenital Heart Disease Disabilities February 18, 2021 WHERE WE ARE TODAY WHERE WE ARE TODAY 12 February 18, 2021 13 Copyright 2020 DC Health | Government of the District of Columbia 14 Copyright 2020 DC Health | Government of the District of Columbia 15 Copyright 2020 DC Health | Government of the District of Columbia 16 Copyright 2020 DC Health | Government of the District of Columbia How have COVID-19 vaccines been administered in the District? 17 Copyright 2020 DC Health | Government of the District of Columbia 18 Copyright 2020 DC Health | Government of the District of Columbia 19 Copyright 2020 DC Health | Government of the District of Columbia 20 Copyright 2020 DC Health | Government of the District of Columbia 21 Copyright 2020 DC Health | Government of the District of Columbia 22 Copyright 2020 DC Health | Government of the District of Columbia 23 Copyright 2020 DC Health | Government of the District of Columbia DCPS BUDGET UPDATES How School Budgets Are Made School budgets are Each school then receives an After collecting input from The final budget for all based on the expected initial funding amount based parents, teachers, and of DCPS (including school student enrollment on its unique population. staff, principals customize budgets from principals) is count for the upcoming This initial funding amount is their proposed budgets compiled and added to the school year. determined by the to meet their Mayor’s citywide budget and Comprehensive Staffing school’s needs. submitted to the DC Council Model (CSM). for approval. www.DCPSbudget.com DCPS’ FY22 Budget: Prioritizing Learning Acceleration and Resiliency for Students By strategically $9M to blending local and non- $15M+ in initiate local sources, such as teacher $33M+ in learning federal stimulus dollars, growth, student learning innovations DCPS will ensure recruitment, acceleration and (e.g. outdoor continuity of and retention social emotional learning) $27M in supports core services and student and $3M+ accelerate learning educator in new recovery and build technology school resiliency for students programs most impacted by the pandemic. Putting students at the center as we build back stronger $15M to stabilize school budgets, $9M continued investment in cluster $10M sustained core services for even with declining enrollment support model students, schools, and families Securing a strong foundation for schools’ road to recovery District of Columbia Public Schools | February 2021 School Budget Resources New DCPS Budget Website viewable on all devices ü Individual Budget Allocation Worksheets list allocations for personnel and non-personnel funding ü Year-Over-Year Budget Narratives explain each school’s budget, enrollment, program changes, and projected acceleration funding ü DCPS Pocket Budget Guide with FY22 investment and planning highlights District of ColumbiaLearn Public Schools more | February 2021 about FY22 school budgets at dcpsbudget.com 27 Integrated Academic and Social Emotional Learning – Supports for All Students ü Integrate social emotional learning, trauma-responsive and relationship building supports into the fabric of the school day ü Adjust curriculum and instruction to respond to student data; double down on practices that accelerate learning Acceleration Academies – Targeted Supports (20-35% of Students) ü Provide additional small-group instructional time – led by effective teachers or $33M+ qualified partners during summer, before/ after school, and/or non-school days Student Learning ü Prepare students to achieve in grade level content by teaching pre-requisite skills they may have missed, while incorporating social emotional supports that Acceleration and will allow them to be successful in their academics Social Emotional Tutoring – Individualized Supports (10% of Students) Supports ü Match 1:1 or 3:1 students with a tutor for frequent and regular engagement, 2-5 times per week ü May occur within or outside regular school time, but does not replace core instruction Each school will engage with their teachers, staff, families, and community to develop a tailored learning recovery plan for summer and beyond. Most funds will be allocated directly to schools based on their enrollment and population of students identified as at-risk. March 1, 2021 Deadline for PK3–8th grade applicants Go to: www.myschooldc.org Call: (202) 888-6336 Email: [email protected] District of Columbia Public Schools | February 2021 29 .