Webutuck's nurse issue remains

WEBUTUCK — The Oct. 18 Board of Education (BOE) meeting again highlighted significant public concern that the Webutuck Central School District cannot provide sufficient health coverage for students with only two full-time nurses.

Following the resignation of the former high school nurse in August, the board as well as Superintendent Steven Schoonmaker had to decide whether to hire someone else for that position or if the district could address its health and safety needs using a different staff structure.

Based on Schoonmaker’s recommendation, the board hired an athletic trainer to provide coverage during the afternoons on the athletic fields.

But school nurse Marilyn Unger spoke up yet again at the beginning of the Oct. 18 BOE meeting in favor of bringing in a third nurse.

“We’re five-and-a-half weeks in,� she said. “I think the staff and students deserve additional nursing services.�

But the issue wasn’t discussed in detail until closing public comments, when resident Al Barros asked why the board wasn’t listening to the advice of its nursing staff.

Schoonmaker said that some of the increased workload on the two remaining district nurses stemmed from “growing pains because of transition� and the fact that previous personnel had left “a lot of paperwork and catching up to do.�

The superintendent said that the district was waiting until things got back to normal before making a more concrete decision of whether the current configuration would remain for the long run.

“Something could happen,� Barros persisted. “The way I see it, we will have enough money [saved up from not having to pay a third nurse’s salary] to pay off a lawsuit.�

Schoonmaker said that every district is different when it comes to health coverage for students. When pressed, he said that “in terms of medical coverage, we’re certainly within compliance with any standards.�

“I do appreciate the board’s input with the after-school athletic trainer, but I’ve seen Cathy [Christofel, the district’s other nurse] stretched very thin,� said PTA member Sue Pomeisl. She noted incidents in which older students were in the nurse’s office and a younger student had an accident on the playground. The nurse wasn’t able to handle both situations at the same time.

“I do think it needs to be revisited, and I do think we have a need for an extra nurse in the building,� she said, “not only for clerical work but to be there to assist with students and their needs.�

BOE President Dale Culver asked that Schoonmaker have another meeting directly with the nursing staff to re-evaluate the situation, and pointed out that following a policy or structural staff change, there is often a period of transition where adjustments are made. That doesn’t mean that the change itself wasn’t the best decision, he added.

“We have addressed the athletic trainer situation for coverage after school,� he said. “It’s a work-in-progress, I believe.�

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