Years-long gridlock between teachers and management at
one of Pennsylvania's most financially challenged school districts continues.
This week, teachers at Chester Upland School District in
Delaware County rejected a proposed contract. Union president Michele Paulick
said while members want a deal, they are willing to hold out for the right one.
"The members haven't seen a change in their salary
since 2011. So, you imagine our frustration," she said. "But it
wasn't a tentative agreement our membership could live with."
One problem with the agreement is proposed pay raises
were less than newly required contributions to employees health plans,
according to Paulick, who declined to share the tentative agreement. The
Philadelphia Inquirer reported the proposed contract called for employees
to make contributions as high as $1,300 a year to their health plans, while
most would teachers would have received annual raises of $2,100. The average
pay, according to that report, is $75,000.
In members' eyes, "the salary increase that they've
offered doesn't truly offset the amount we're going ot have to pay in health
care," said Paulick.
The old contract between the district and the Chester
Upland Education Association expired in 2013.
Since then, both sides been trying to find a workable
solution amid the school district's very public money problems.
Due to chronic low test scores and financial shortfalls,
Chester Upland had has some form of state oversight or outright control for
more than 20 years. Instead of a school board, the district has a
state-appointed leader, called a receiver.
In
fall 2015, teachers
went to work even though school officials told them it didn't have the funds to
issue paychecks, due to Pennsylvania's long-overdue state budget. In the end,
the state, which contributes a greater portion of funding to Chester Upland and
other districts where property taxes are insufficient, bailed the district out.
After protests by
teachers last summer, contract negotiations resumed in the fall,
leading to the tentative agreement rejected this week.
"We are truly disappointed by the results of this
vote," said Peter R. Barsz, Chester Upland's interim receiver, in an
emailed statement. "It is our belief that hours of productive talks
produced a proposed agreement that was fair to all parties."
Paulick said the union has distributed surveys to its two
hundred plus members, covering what they would accept in a future agreement.
She said representatives of the two sides spoke this week. In a statement, the
district said no further talks are scheduled.
Source: NewsWorks
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