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Negotiations Update: Time to Act

February 19, 2016

 

We had a bargaining session on February 1. The school committee, citing many excuses, was completely unprepared, and failed to give us long-promised counter-proposals on our many issues related to time to teach, work­load, paperwork, and other proposals concerning our expanding jobs. We are sorry to report that they had nothing – telling us they would have something at our session on March 1.

The negotiators have concluded that the only way to get what we need is to engage in an escalating set of actions that demonstrate our commitment to fight for the schools our children deserve. (See next action to left.)

Brookline educators have been working without a contract since September 1. Why is this? you might ask. Good question. According to the School Com­mittee, it’s because of forces they can’t control. School Committee members recently told Brookline’s state legislators that “every year we discuss the grow­ing pressure on our budget, our administrators, and our educators from federal and state mandates to implement new curriculum, programs or services.” They “now have become issues for us in collective bargaining as teachers seek relief from the additional pressures on their time.” The BEU is glad that the School Committee has grasped our point about time pressure. However, we strongly disagree that the lack of a contract is beyond the School Committee’s control. We think the School Committee entirely should take responsibility for the lack of a contract.

Consider this: Teachers and other BEU educators made comprehensive presentations and submitted corresponding proposals to the School Commit­tee concerning 1) the effects of worsening student-educator ratios (which cal­culation of average class size obscures); 2) the loss of still more personal atten­tion for students due to increasing amounts of paperwork and data collection; 3) the need to do more to ensure the safety of children and staff; and 4) increas­ingly top-down management that is harming efforts to tap teacher expertise, to achieve equity, and to “foster interaction among diverse viewpoints” (PSB Strategic Plan).

The chair of the School Committee’s bargaining team acknowledged to legislators that the current approach that imposes increasing numbers of top-down mandates is not working. “We have in fact in Brookline stalled on closing the achievement gap in the last few years,“ she said. Still, while district leaders stressed that an initiative that is good in principle can falter when it is imposed from above and combined with too many others. The School Com­mittee seems to have turned a blind eye to how they are doing the same thing to teachers in the schools and at the bargaining table.

We designed bargaining proposals specifically to address what we thought were mutual concerns about possible erosion of the high quality edu­cation that BEU educators were delivering, and for which Brookline is known. Yet, in spite of the fact that we made these proposals over a year and a half ago, to date we have received no significant counter proposals—none! Management instead has dug in their heels and refused to address our concerns with any contract language at all. “Trust us,” they said, implying that say what we wish, we will ultimately be expected do what they say.

BEU proposals include changes in scheduling and staffing that make possible serious commitments to inclusion and equity and a respect for diversity. Our proposals are practical approaches that defend against such commitments being reduced to formulaic exercises. They ensure that teachers’ professional judgment will be honored, and that edu­cators will have time to support each and every student in expressing themselves in creative and culturally sensitive ways, which fosters a love of learning.

We have negotiations scheduled for January 28, February 1, and February 22. New conditions make it easier to reach an agreement. Brookline voters, by a large margin, supported an increase in school funding, and Congress has loosened its grip on state and local education policy. However, in this promising climate that invites creative solutions, we are still waiting for the School Committee to engage constructively at the bargaining table with the BEU.

We ask that members of the community join us in calling on the School Committee to come to an agreement concerning the many important problems we have addressed. With the support of our membership and those in the community who are supportive of our goals, we hope to see the School Committee move toward an agreement in these upcoming bargaining sessions.

Filed Under: Contract Campaign News, Negotiations Tagged With:

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