Philadelphia’s School Reform Commission announced they
will cancel their labor contract with the teachers union after nearly two years
of negotiations, the commission announced in a surprise meeting Monday morning.
The labor contract with the Philadelphia Federation of
Teachers (PFT) was cancelled so that ammendments can be made to the employee
contributions regarding benefits, said SRC Chairman William J. Green -- a move
that comes after 21 months of unsuccessful negotiation between the school
district and the PFT.
The changes to the PFT's healthcare benefits package will
allow for urgently needed funds to be reallocated to schools within the district,
according to Green.
"The time has come for them to share in the
sacrifices that everyone else had made," Green said.
The sacrifices that Green was referring to are
concessions made by other staff within the district as well as students and
parents.
“We are taking this action after the district has cut
5,000 positions, closed 31 facilities, reduced administrative costs to
approximately 2.7 percent and cut spending by close to $1 billion and our city
and state funders stepped forward to increased recurring funding by over $212
million,” said the chairman.
Changes to employee benefit contributions will provide
nearly $44M to students this school year and almost $200M over the next four
years, according to Green.
Previously PFT members did not pay for their health
coverage. The new benefit plan requires tiered employee contributions based on
salary. The changes are scheduled to take effect Dec. 15.
Superintendent Dr. William Hite followed up statements
made by Chairman Green by emphasizing that the school district remains
committed to reaching a new contract agreement with the PFT.
The announcement comes nearly a week after a $2-per-pack
cigarette tax went into effect. The new tax will provide revenue for the
cash-strapped district.
Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Corbett, who was very vocal in his
support of the cigarette tax, released this statement shortly after the SRC
meeting:
"Today's action by the SRC will effectively close
the funding gap and provide the district with the ability to hire new teachers,
counselors and nurses and secure educational resources that will benefit the
students of Philadelphia."
Source: NBC10.com
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