The Pennsylvania Supreme Court ruled Monday that the
Philadelphia School Reform Commission broke state law when it canceled its
contract with the city’s teacher’s union.
The unanimous decision upholds two lower court rulings
and marks the end of a legal battle that began in October 2014 when the SRC
made the stunning decision to scrap its existing contract with the Philadelphia
Federation of Teachers and impose changes to union health benefits.
Monday’s decision, penned by Chief Justice Thomas Saylor,
is a decisive victory for the union — one that removes at least some of the
uncertainty surrounding union negotiations with the district over a new
contract.
“My hope is that we will now finally get to the table
with the school district who will be serious about negotiating a contract and
moving forward,” said PFT president Jerry Jordan.
In the short term, Monday’s decision changes little for
the district’s 8,500 teachers, who have been working under terms of an expired
labor agreement since 2013. Teachers haven’t received raises during that time.
Teacher salaries and benefits will continue to be governed by the “status quo”
contract until the PFT and district can agree on new terms.
The Supreme Court ruling has no direct financial
consequences for the district because the contract cancellation attempt wasn’t
successful and district teachers never experienced a corresponding reduction in
benefits. The district highlighted that point in a statement Monday.
“We are disappointed with this ruling,” said the
statement from district spokesman Kevin Geary. “When the lawsuit was filed in
2014, the school district was enjoined from moving ahead with changes so there
is no financial impact to the district or to teachers, all proposed health care
changes were also enjoined at that time. This ruling does not change our stated
goal of achieving new and fair labor agreements with all of our unions in
2016.”
As those negotiations unfold, the district now knows
definitively it will not have a powerful trump card in its deck — the use of
unilateral cancellation.
Legal language crafted long before the statute that
birthed the SRC is the reason.
A 1959 state law gives distressed districts the power to
cancel contracts “other than teachers contracts.” The SRC argued that the term
“teachers contracts” applied only to individual teacher contracts, not to the
collectively bargained union contract. The Supreme Court found otherwise,
saying that the exception referred to the type of deals negotiated between the
SRC and the PFT.
“We hold, at least insofar as teachers are concerned,
that collective bargaining agreements are ‘teachers’ contracts’ which are
excepted from a school reform commission’s cancellation powers,” according to
the ruling,
Back in 2014, the SRC argued it had the authority under
state law to cancel the union contract, and it
said the district’s acute financial woes necessitated drastic action.
The district argued its changes would have saved Philadelphia schools $44
million and reduced layoffs. Specifically, the district wanted teachers to
contribute toward their health care premiums, something most PFT members don’t
do under the current contract.
The climate of crisis that loomed over the SRC’s 2014
move has temporarily passed. The district even boasts a modest surplus at the
moment. Still, district officials warn Philadelphia schools have a long-term
structural deficit that will result in future fiscal pain.
It remains to be seen whether the district and its
largest bargaining unit can hash out a deal between now and then.
Source: NewsWorks
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