Commonwealth Court judges have handed a win to the
Philadelphia Federation of Teachers, ruling that the School Reform Commission
cannot throw out the teachers' union's contract and impose new terms.
The decision was confirmed by Jerry Jordan, PFT
president, on Thursday morning.
"This is a very big victory," Jordan said.
After nearly two years of negotiations, the district had
moved on Oct. 6 to cancel the teachers' contract and impose health-benefits
changes that would save the cash-strapped system $54 million annually,
officials said.
In the decision, judges said that neither the state
Public School Code nor the Legislature have expressly given the SRC the power
to cancel its teachers' contract.
"This Court is cognizant of the dire financial
situation which the Districtcurrently faces and the SRC’s extensive efforts to
achieve the overall goal of properlyand adequately meeting the educational
needs of the students," Judge Patricia A. McCullough wrote for the court. "There
have been numerous difficult decisions that the SRC has been forced to make in
an effort to overcome these economic hurdles, including a one-third reduction
in staff and theclosing of 31 schools in recent years."
However, the court concluded, "glaringly absent"
from the law "is is a referenceto a provision which expressly gives the
SRC the right to cancel" a collective bargaining agreement.
To do so, the court said, the Legislature would need to
act to grant such powers expressly.
The PFT has long argued that the SRC does not have the
power to cancel contracts.
SRC Chairman Bill Green, in a statement, said he was
"obviously disappointed" with the ruling.
Still, he said, the SRC has "clear statutory authority
for its action and was exercising one of the core functions for which it was
created: seeking to achieve financial stability for the district amid a crisis
of underfunding that prevents our schools from providing basic resources and
services to students."
Green said the SRC was still reviewing the ruling, and
would "shortly determine" next steps. An appeal to the state Supreme
Court seems likely.
Last year, however, that court declined to hear a similar
argument when the SRC chose to bypass seniority in teacher assignments, layoffs
and recalls.
"I don't have any reason to believe they would take
this case on appeal," Jordan said of the Supreme Court.
Mayor Nutter, in a statement, said the two sides must
move forward.
"As the School Reform Commission reviews its next
steps, we urge the PFT and the SRC to get back to the bargaining table
immediately and do the work needed to reach agreement on a contract that
provides for the changes needed to educate better our children and that also
respects the teachers in their work," Nutter said.
Source: Philly.com
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