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Tacoma, Washington Teachers On Strike After Failed Negotiations

Tacoma Teachers Strike

09/13/11 10:06 PM ET   AP

TACOMA, Wash. — Thousands of students in Washington state's third-largest school district will be spending a second day out of class as school officials seek a court order to force hundreds of striking teachers back to work.

A Superior Court hearing has been scheduled at 9 a.m. Wednesday on the Tacoma School District's request for an injunction to order nearly 1,900 teachers back to work. The district's lawyers contend that public employees cannot legally strike under state law. Tacoma Education Association spokesman Rich Wood said union lawyers will be ready with a response.

The district has canceled Wednesday classes for Tacoma's 28,000 students. In Washington state, only the Seattle and Spokane school districts are larger.

Teachers hit the picket lines Tuesday after voting overwhelmingly Monday night to strike over issues that include teacher pay, class size and the way the district's teachers are transferred and reassigned. Tacoma teachers had been working without a contract since school started Sept. 1.

Both the Washington attorney general and state judges have ruled that state public employees do not have the right to strike.

The News Tribune newspaper reported () that the walkout is the first public school teachers strike in Tacoma in 33 years, since 1978. http://bit.ly/puJUa6

District lawyer Shannon McMinimee said school officials hoped for a decision from the judge Wednesday.

"The district is doing everything it can to get its staff back to work," McMinimee told the newspaper outside court Tuesday afternoon. The teachers "are engaging in an illegal strike. From what I understand, the teaching union has refused to negotiate since Saturday. Letting that go on longer is not going to do anyone any good."

Union spokesman Wood called the district's move to court "extremely disappointing."

"We think it's a shame the Tacoma Public Schools administration and the Tacoma School Board would rather drag their teachers to court than negotiate a fair contract settlement," he said, adding, "Tacoma teachers care about their students, and they will decide when to end this strike."

Eighty-seven percent of the Tacoma Education Association's total membership voted to walk out, after weekend contract negotiations failed to result in an agreement.

"It's my 39th year of teaching. I've never struck before," fourth grade teacher Robert Brown, 60, said shortly after helping assemble signs at Wilson High School. "I'd rather be in school, I'd rather not have adversarial relationships. The principal at my school is just wonderful. My relationship with him is great. It's very negative from the central office."

Brown said he voted to strike because of the district's attempts to move teachers around the district despite seniority, saying, "in the view of this 60-year-old, it's age discrimination."

A strike vote at the end of August failed by about 28 votes. Union bylaws require approval by 80 percent of the nearly 1,900 members to authorize a strike.

A 2006 state attorney general's opinion said state and local public employees, including teachers, have no legally protected right to strike. That opinion also noted state law lacks specific penalties for striking public employees.

During several past teacher strikes, Washington school districts have gone to court and judges have ordered teachers back to work.

Tacoma teachers earned an average salary of $63,793 during the last school year, according to the district. They are the best-paid teachers in Pierce County and about the fifth-highest paid among the state's largest districts, behind teachers in Everett, Northshore, Seattle and Bellevue, according to state data.

The Legislature included in its state budget a 1.9 percent cut in teacher pay but left it up to school districts to figure out how to save that money. Some districts have made cuts elsewhere, some have cut teacher pay, and others have worked out compromises with their local teachers union.

The News Tribune reports that on the issue of pay, the district said Sunday it has offered teachers two options.

They could maintain the current pay schedule and sacrifice pay for one personal day, one individual optional training day and one schoolwide training day. Or they could accept an effective 1.35 percent cut in the salary schedule. In exchange, teachers would be allowed to schedule 2.5 furlough days.

The district said it has also offered to keep class size maximums at the current level. The union wants to decrease class sizes, but the district says subtracting one child per class could cost the district about $1.8 million a year.

Extracurricular athletic activities will continue as planned, even with the teachers striking, the News Tribune reported.

___

Information from: The News Tribune, http://www.thenewstribune.com

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TACOMA, Wash. — Thousands of students in Washington state's third-largest school district will be spending a second day out of class as school officials seek a court order to force hundreds of s...
TACOMA, Wash. — Thousands of students in Washington state's third-largest school district will be spending a second day out of class as school officials seek a court order to force hundreds of s...
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12:30 AM on 09/22/2011
I live in Tacoma. This isn't about money but about teacher seniority. We have the oldest teaching corp in the state and they refuse to give up seniority with school and class assignments which many of the other larger districts in the state have already done. The other districts also think they are nuts.
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08:42 AM on 09/15/2011
Continued:


A strike means no progress. Both sides are at a stalemate. That means both are losing, but the students are losing most of all. There are students for whom school is a refuge from a chaotic home. There are students who don't get enough to eat without school meals. And students who depend on summer jobs will be at a disadvantage if they have to be in school to make up days while other students are free to take the earliest jobs offered, or if they need final report cards to apply to military or schools or any other reason after graduation.
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08:42 AM on 09/15/2011
For those who are writing "They should think of the kids" (which actually means the students) and similar complaints, the teachers ARE thinking of "the kids"--their OWN kids. Any parent who would put other children's interests above that of their own family isn't much of a parent. It's always surprising to me how so many seem to think teachers should care more about their students than their own families. That would be unnatural.

The teachers should get back to work. The students shouldn't have to pay the price for what adults have done and what they won't do. If a contract expires, then the old contract is still in force until there is a new contract. The administration can't move teachers around like chess pieces at will or fire them for no cause until it's in the new contract and both "sides" have agreed to it and signed it--which is unlikely to happen anyway.

If the teachers want to "strike", then they can simply "work to contract"--meaning no extra time "off the clock". That would make enough of an impact so the district would have to stop refusing to negotiate and get back to the bargaining table.
11:29 AM on 09/14/2011
Must be tough making 63K to work 10 months a year.
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rdsmith627
09:38 PM on 09/14/2011
If I met you and you said that, I would knock every tooth out of your mouth. I am pretty sure that I worked all 12 months, 10 of which were 15 hour days. Show a little gratitude.
01:24 AM on 09/15/2011
wow that's a very nice thing coming from a teacher...i wouldn't want you teaching my kid..
10:22 PM on 09/19/2011
Here's a suggestion. Think of a subject you like, draw up lesson plans for an entire week. The school district tells you that you have an assignment where kids rarely come to school, do their homework, belongs to gangs, are pregnant, have a real drug problem, and could care less about learning. No mentor will be around to help you reach out and teach these kids, not even the principal will be around to help. Each night you will have to grade papers and turn them back to the students each and every day. Then see if $63k is enough. Let me know how it went when you're done. Do I need to say more?
05:19 AM on 09/14/2011
We frequently hear such news about going on strike either teachers or students,now the news about Washington Teachers On Strike After Failed Negotiations ,is a more shocking news for other students and teachers,we should overcome our major issues by mutual negotiation and understanding,no benefit to go on any strike,this is an open loss both students and teachers.
04:05 PM on 09/14/2011
"w­e should overcome our major issues"

I have overcome my major issues. How is progress coming on yours?
10:23 PM on 09/19/2011
you gotta love armchair negotiators, they know it all
02:00 AM on 09/14/2011
First of all, I think the educational system here is essential, but insanely weak. If anyone says that public education in this country is going well, please look at Michigan's current educational predicament. Teachers are VITAL & YES I WOULD TAKE THE CUT, especially if that meant the thousands who just graduated with teaching degrees willll take it. I have doubled my workload with no compensation/benefits at ALL-Im lucky to be employed. I would GLADLY take a even 40,000 a year salary with three months off, benefits, & likelyhood of tenure.

I would also do this because MY job effects ME and my outcome, NOT THE FUTURE OF AMERICA & its children where we have people unable to fill highly qualified positions. The joke is that we keep cutting funding where we need it most. It IS absolutely deplorable, but YOU HAVE JOBS IN A COUNTRY WHERE POVERTY IS NOW AN ISSUE.

Have you seen how far we are behind other countries? NOT doing well-a problem since the 80's. We teach TESTS not CRITICAL THINKING. Your thoughts of America having a great education system is a tad out of line seeing how most kids now get jobs easier in other countries with teaching. Teachers are only influencial when they are installing kids with educational values, not when they are keeping 28,000 children home. Have you seen the results that come out of China? Kids there likely don't NEED explanations repeated because it is being taught correctly the first time.
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Bryan Morris
09:42 AM on 09/14/2011
I"m sorry to disagree, but your decision to take the cut DOES affect the future of the country and the profession. The simple fact is, every time you agree to take the cut, all you do is agree to a temporary fix for a much more deeply seeded issue. Every time you take the cut, and pass on that new paradigm to the next generation of graduating educators, you erode the incentives for the best and brightest to enter the profession...

You're really not helping the kids at all by giving in to these cuts - In fact, you're hurting them.
04:20 PM on 09/14/2011
"deeply seeded issue"

!
05:00 PM on 09/14/2011
The future is "Online Classes". This will eliminate the need or at least cut the need for teachers. It's already available for "k thru 12th grade. Online is your next generation, the computer is going to be your teacher.
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Jenn May
"insert clever quote here"
11:07 PM on 09/13/2011
Good for them!
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10:35 PM on 09/13/2011
I'm a teacher in the same state as the teachers striking and I don't think they should have gone on strike. Our district also still doesn't have a contract and we had to take the pay cut--along with some people losing their jobs, hours being cut, and programs being curtailed or eliminated. In fact, I just told the union president the other day that if a strike was going to happen that I wouldn't support it. Striking is for serious things like dangerous work conditions or illegal treatment or other truly important issues that can't be resolved any other way, not for salary disputes. They need to go back to work and continue negotiations with help from the Uniserve people--that's one reason why they pay their union dues.
05:15 PM on 09/13/2011
YOU HAVE JOBS! OUR EDUCATION SYSTEM IS A JOKE. take your damn pay cut, because you're one of the highest paid districts in the state, and try to not make this country continue to look like we have no idea how to handle an educational system. No wonder we have unqualified students, their teachers would rather skip out for more $$. Passionate teaching? Not without their beloved pay.

Teachers are extremely valuable and I understand the amount of work, but when its your job or a paycut, you need to stay in the classroom because our kids aren't learning any valuable lesson from any of this bullshit.
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CodyCollie
09:32 PM on 09/13/2011
I can't even tell you how much I disagree with you.

Teachers have been demonized by the GOP and the press for the last year. Workers are also being blamed for our economic mess. No one should have to stand by and eat cr*p just because they are lucky enough to be employed. If everyone does that now, as the economy improves, employers will be walking all over people like they did in the days pre-union.

What has happened to this country that everyone stands on the sidelines and doesn't speak up and fight for themselves. Maybe the Iraq War would have been over much sooner if people had protested and not stood around and let the Bush administration allow our citizens to be killed and maimed over a lie. We fought the Vietnam War and we ended it. A democracy is only as good as those who fight for their rights.

That is the lesson the students can learn from this.
04:32 PM on 09/14/2011
"employers will be walking all over people like they did in the days pre-union."

So how's that "post union" life working out for you?

"We fought the Vietnam War and we ended it. A democracy is only as good as those who fight for their rights."

Some fought the Vietnam War and some fought *against involvement* in the war.

But striking does what, exactly? Teachers out of work, kids out of school, state out of money.
09:54 PM on 09/14/2011
Teachers have not been demonized ... but bad teachers have been citicized, along with the excessive and costly due process rights that protect them. Plenty of protection for adults but little for students.
10:00 PM on 09/13/2011
Would you take the pay cut? Its unfair to say take the pay cut because you get to keep a job. One of the biggest problems of this recession is not only unemployment, but also underemployment. This is part of the larger struggle for workers' rights. How much rights do you feel a worker, in this case a teacher, gets in the workplace?

Why judge a teacher because they are worried about working conditions, including pay. Do you find their pay that large? A teacher can be passionate while still fighing for their rights in the classroom. Attacking a teacher's working conditions, including pay, is the best way to push out some of the best teachers we have and prevent others from becoming teachers.
04:34 PM on 09/14/2011
"Would you take the pay cut?"

Indeed I would. Ageism is alive and well.

About ten years ago my boss called my supervisor and I into his office. He asked us if we would take a pay cut. He said no, I said yes. I still have a job, my supervisor soon looked for new work. As it turned out, he formed his own company and is doing much better than before, but he was young and I am not.
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glockman
04:53 PM on 09/13/2011
As a member of a public employee union, this is the only facet of public unionism that I strongly disagree with.

Public unions should not strike. I'm sure many of you will vehemently disagree with me, but I hold to my belief.

The only individuals losing out on this are the students. Don't try and justify the actions of the teacher's union to me because it won't work.
10:01 PM on 09/13/2011
I find this is a lose-lose situation for the teachers' union. Do they take the pay cut? What happens to their families then? Do they strike for their rights? If so, can we still see them as dedicated to their profession?
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vobox3343
Each day is a new day - make the most of it
09:14 AM on 09/14/2011
Students aren't losing one doggone thing in a country where you can actually be home schooled. Most students are computer whizzes, and you?
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glockman
04:28 PM on 09/14/2011
What about me?

And I'm not sure of the reasoning behind your computer whiz statement. How does that relate to this story?
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stin0034
04:38 PM on 09/13/2011
Teachers aren't going to get public opinion on their side when you have 9+% unemployment and a crappy economy. I've been given a bigger work load and haven't had a raise in 3 years. I'm happy I have a job though. Everyone is feeling the pinch. How did the Verizon workers strike go?
04:28 PM on 09/13/2011
Who wants to be a teacher??? Interesting info at:
http://www.e-forwards.com/2011/03/who-wants-to-be-a-teacher/
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Rachel Spencer
In the middle
04:07 PM on 09/13/2011
Funny, people are always talking about how useless teachers are, but cry the minute they go on strike. I think they are afraid that they may have to actual pay for daycare intsead of getting some place free to drop their kid off for 8 hours.
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Yam716
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10:36 AM on 09/14/2011
Amen!

Teachers are NOT babysitters! Too bad there isn't more respect for the profession that helps to educate most of our society.
03:54 PM on 09/14/2011
"some place free"?? You must not have to pay property taxes. Mine are around $4,000 a year. I also have to pay for school supplies, lunches, sports equipment, and bus transportation to and from school. Where do you think the teachers salary comes from? It comes from the TAX payer. Free??? You must be one of THOSE people I have to support with my Tax dollar if you think school is free and can't think for yourself.
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Lawrence Bullock
03:58 PM on 09/13/2011
I don't quite get how this works. Would you, like, force them back and then stand there with a rifle or something to get them to teach?
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Avatarius1
Just to the left of anarchy
05:17 PM on 09/13/2011
No, just put them on leave without pay.
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Lawrence Bullock
03:53 PM on 09/14/2011
Well, I don't see why we need teachers anyway. They're overpaid and lazy. I'd rather stay home and teach my own children and look after them 24 hours a day. I'd rather not turn over my children's upbringing to people who were stupid enough to want to teach for substandard wages and listen to parents who always know better anyway. How dumb do you have to be to be in the middle of a constant pissing match.
04:38 PM on 09/14/2011
The story reveals that no penalty is defined in state law; merely no provision for strikers.

As I read it, the teachers have simply not reported to work and would be individually liable for whatever consequences exist for a teacher not reporting to work.
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frdafury
There's no kill switch on awesome!
12:49 PM on 09/13/2011
How many administrators does each school have? Are they taking any type of pay reduction? Who determines how or when a teacher is transferred? I'm with the teachers in terms of striking; it's about time we fought back against administrators and politicians that take for granted what they have and screw the rest. How many politicians have had their salaries reduced or their health care or even have to deal with the numbers of people on a daily basis that don't kowtow to them? Viva La Revolution!
04:40 PM on 09/14/2011
"Viva La Revolution­! "

What is that in English?

"it's about time we fought back against administra­tors and politician­s"

It helps to do so legally. It helps even more not to "fight" as if your employer is your enemy.
04:40 PM on 09/14/2011
"it's about time we fought back against administra­tors and politician­s"

It is a strange attitude that you have, that you think you can attack your employer and not suffer consequences.