After five months of organizing, teachers and staff at
the Pennsylvania School for the Deaf voted overwhelmingly to unionize.
The 149-to-12 vote in favor of a union took place
Thursday.
"There were a lot of people waiting for the results
in the gym," said teacher Maelyn Entwhistle. "We got it texted it to
us, and one of the people signed it to the crowd and we were cheering. It was a
special moment."
Teacher Sarah McDevitt said she wasn't expecting such a
strong turnout at the Thursday meeting.
"I had to reread the numbers," she said.
"We knew we would have an overwhelming majority, but didn't realize how
much of a majority ... and it shows how united we are."
The Pennsylvania School for the Deaf serves about 200
students from 3 to 21 who are deaf or hard of hearing. Though technically a
private institution, the school receives much of its funding from the state to
educate students whose needs could not be addressed in their local public
schools.
Staff went public with their plans to organize in
November and petitioned the National Labor Relations Board to form a union on
Dec. 1.
Employees also agreed to combine professional and
nonprofessional staff in one bargaining unit to be represented by the American
Federation of Teachers – Pennsylvania (AFT-PA). The new union will represent
about 175 teachers, aides, secretaries and support personnel.
Changing policies
School staff reported first thinking about the need for
collective bargaining in summer 2014. Several teachers said changes to the
school administration and board in the past few years left them out of a
"unilateral" decision-making process.
McDevitt said she hoped the union would bring more
"consistency, fairness – especially in hiring and firing practices"
and a way for staff to speak up without fear of recrimination from
administrators or the school's board.
Organizers also said that they received pushback from the
school when plans to form a union were announced. "The day before the
election, we received the fourth letter to our homes," said McDevitt.
Letters detailed why staff should not support the union.
"The administration was making the union a
third-party, when really we're the union," said McDevitt.
Head of School Marja Brandon responded to a request for
an interview via email.
"We recognize and respect our employees' legal right
to unionize. [The] vote to unionize by teachers and staff can be a victory for
all of us as we work together to make The Pennsylvania School for the Deaf the
best school possible for students and a positive environment where everyone can
excel," said Brandon.
Coming up, the union's 175 members and administrators
will have to come together in contract negotiations. Next week, teacher Meghan
Devonshire said, the staff will start laying the groundwork for that process,
readying surveys and starting to form committees.
Since the election, Entwhistle said she has seen
"some positive response form the administration." Other teachers
expressed a desire to let go of conflicts surrounding formation of the union.
And McDevitt said she doesn't want to
detract from a conciliatory contracting process by getting "distracted by
things have been happening."
And she wants to refocus attention on the students.
"For many of our students, Pennsylvania School for
the Deaf is their second home," said McDevitt. "They have full access
to communication here. And we want that second-home feeling to stay."
Source: Newsworks
No comments:
Post a Comment