Tag Archives: vaccines

Volunteers on city & county school boards, other government groups are quitting due to harassment, conflict

National Public Radio (NPR) news has had two stories recently regarding how volunteers serving on the boards of public institutions across the USA are being harassed by angry, volatile community members angry about COVID-19 prevention protocols, and the stress and fears regarding their safety is leading many to quit.

One story profiles a school board member in Indiana whose adult son drove two hours from his home to be with her during a school board meeting to ensure her safety against aggressive audience members. He took his mother in his car so protesters wouldn’t know her car and be able to identify it later around town. When the meeting was over, he circled her block for 30 minutes to make sure no one was following them to her home.

Charlie Wilson is the past president of the National School Boards Association and a school board member since 2007. But he won’t be running for another term: he reports getting daily hate emails and sometimes phone calls and, occasionally people knocking on his door, “threatening to do all kinds of things.”

In another NPR story, a Nevada school board member said he had thoughts of suicide before stepping down amid threats and harassment. In Virginia, a board member resigned over what she saw as politics driving decisions on masks. The vitriol at board meetings in Wisconsin had one member fearing he would find his tires slashed.

Police have been called to intervene in places including Vail, Colorado, where parents protesting a mask mandate pushed their way into a board room in April, and in Mesa County, Colorado, where Doug Levinson was among school board members escorted to their cars by officers who had been unable to de-escalate a raucous August 17 meeting. “Why am I doing this?” Levinson asked himself.

In his letter of resignation from Wisconsin’s Oconomowoc Area School Board, Rick Grothaus said its work had become “toxic and impossible to do.” He resigned August 15 along with two other members, including Dan Raasch, who wondered if his car and windshield would be intact after meetings.

School board members are usually unpaid volunteers, often parents, grandparents, or former educators who step forward to donate their time to shape school policy, choose a superintendent and review the budget. But a growing number are resigning or questioning their willingness to serve as meetings have devolved into shouting contests between deeply political constituencies over how racial issues are taught, masks in schools, and COVID-19 vaccines and testing requirements.

The National School Boards Association’s interim executive director, Chip Slaven, said there isn’t evidence of widespread departures, but he and several board members reached by The Associated Press said the charged political climate that has seeped from the national stage into their meetings has made a difficult volunteer role even more challenging, if not impossible.

Volunteer engagement on civic bodies, like school boards, planning commissions, public safety or police advisory commissions and other government bodies is supposed to give decision-making and responsibilities to people who don’t have a financial stake in the outcome of decisions, who don’t fear that losing that role will affect their income – because it isn’t their job. And having public meetings means community members can have an outlet for their opinions, and get those opinions in the public record. Even before COVID-19, it was often largely thankless work. People have signed up for these volunteering roles, or even run to be elected for such, for a variety of reasons: many because they feel an obligation to serve their community, that it’s a part of their obligation to the society in which they are a part. Some do it because they aspire to elected office in their city, county, state – even nationally – and they need the experience. Some do it because they want to have a greater profile in their community, maybe because they think it will lead to more customers for their business or that they will get noticed and hired by a place where they want to work. Highly partisan politics and ideology are not top of mind for most of them – but even before the global pandemic, there would be movements, largely by people on the extreme right, to get volunteers involved who would push an agenda: stopping evolutionary biology from being taught in schools, requiring prayer at public events, pushing for ordinances that would close a health clinic for women that provides abortion services or that would prevent affordable housing from being built, etc. There are now more candidates than ever who are single-issue focused or openly partisan running for the coming school board elections across the country.

Managers of volunteers and consultants regarding volunteerism and volunteer engagement: what is your advice for supporting volunteers in these roles? We can’t stop the hostility at meetings, but how can we support volunteers we want in these roles, so they don’t quit, so they won’t feel endangered or so stressed out they quit? What support should they expect in these roles? Comment below:

Lessons for aid & development are everywhere – including on a TV comedy

I find lessons for aid and humanitarian work, including public health education, all around me, if I’m paying attention.

That includes watching the Andy Griffith Show, a 1960s television show that is still frequently shown in the USA. For my international readers: the show, mostly a comedy but sometimes dramatic, follows the adventures of a small town Southern sheriff and his family. It’s a highly sentimental, idealized show more about how people wish small town life was in the USA than it actually ever was. But I’m very fond of it because it shows the very real sweetness and eccentricities of small town anywhere, not just the USA, even if it’s highly romanticized and leaves out important facts of life in the Southern USA, like Jim Crow and the oppression of black Americans.

I recently saw one of the few episodes I don’t recall seeing when I was a kid. It’s called The County Nurse. The official summary: “Andy is forced to exert all his persuasiveness to get a farmer to take a tetanus shot.”

The premise is this: there is a county nurse – a government-funded health worker – that is visiting the town of Mayberry as a part of her job. The nurse has promised her bosses that she will have a 100% success rate in inoculations, but the person standing in her way on delivering on this promise is farmer Rafe Hollister, who has never had a tetanus shot. Rafe says he has never been sick and has never had to see a doctor and, therefore, doesn’t need this shot. In fact, he’s quite skeptical about vaccines in general. Sheriff Andy wants to help because he does believe in vaccines and because he is attracted to the new, and very pretty, county nurse and wants to help her out. At one point, Andy says to Rafe “go ahead and try the stethoscope. You can hear your heart beating!” And Rafe replies “I don’t need that to know if my hearts beating, I’m alive ain’t I? Then my hearts beating.” Rafe also says, “I ain’t never been to a doctor in my life. When I was born, I had my mama. When I die, I’ll have the undertaker. I don’t see no sense in clutterin’ up things in between.”

Andy offers the nurse advice at one point: “With a fellow like Rafe, you don’t just walk up and say ‘let me give you a tetanus shot.’ You hafta kinda make him trust ya first. Gain his confidence. Well ya sneak up on him is whatcha ya do.” And that’s just what they do: Andy finally uses his singing and storytelling ability to shock Rafe into taking his shot. Andy sings a sad song,”Dig my grave with a silver spade,” and talks about what Rafe’s funeral will be like if he dies from tetanus. Rafe relents at last.

It’s an episode where city sensibilities and country ways clash. The wariness of the country folk towards doctors and formal medicine is stressed – and not for the first time in this show. The only thing missing from this episode to make it more realistic would have been Rafe repeating crazy beliefs about vaccines.

You can find pirated versions of this episode online relatively easily. It’s less than 30 minutes long.

Sadly, I don’t think we have county nurses anymore…

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