MOUNT AIRY After 18 months of frustration over their
inability to obtain a new contract, teachers at Khepera Charter School in Mount
Airy have unanimously voted to authorize negotiators to call a strike if
necessary.
Teachers said they hope they won't go on strike. If they do,
it would be a first. None of the handful of charter schools that are unionized
in Pennsylvania has had one.
The 26 teachers and counselors at Khepera represented by the
Alliance of Charter School Employees, Local 6056, voted April 2 to give
negotiators the power to call a strike.
In a statement released by the union, teachers at the K-8
charter alleged that foot-dragging by the board had prompted many staffers to
leave, undermining students' learning.
Khepera's first union contract expired in December 2012 and
was extended three times through last August as the teachers attempted to reach
a new agreement.
"With negotiations dragging on nearly two years, staff
turnover has been tremendous," Kim Johnson, a science teacher and
president of the local, said in the statement, issued late Tuesday.
"Teachers want to provide the best education possible,
but without a contract, many of our teachers are looking for jobs elsewhere so
they can support their own families, pay their student loans, and apply for
mortgages," added Johnson, whose children graduated from Khepera.
"It's taking its toll on the close relationships that have been
established between the teachers, the children and the parents."
Richard Isaac, Khepera's board president, could not be
reached for comment Wednesday.
Teachers and some parents held an informational picket line
April 10 to call on parents to urge Isaac to reach a new agreement.
The association has filed two charges of unfair labor
practices against Khepera that are pending before the National Labor Relations
Board, union sources said.
Khepera opened in 2004. Its five-year operating charter is
up for renewal, and the district's charter office is reviewing the school's
operations.
Although Pennsylvania's 1997 charter school law gives
teachers the right to unionize, teachers at only a few charters have done so.
The alliance, an affiliate of the American Federation of
Teachers Pennsylvania, also represents teachers at four other charters in the
city.
Teachers at the Pennsylvania Cyber Charter School, the
largest cyber charter in the state, recently voted to form a bargaining unit
with the Pennsylvania State Education Association.
The online school based in Midland, Beaver County, enrolls
more than 11,000 students from across the state.
PSEA has represented teachers at a few other charter schools
in the past, but Pennsylvania Cyber is the only charter in the state now
affiliated with that union.
Source: Philly.com
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