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Home›Online Teaching›Minneapolis teachers say they will strike starting Tuesday | Health and fitness

Minneapolis teachers say they will strike starting Tuesday | Health and fitness

By Bradley M. Wells
March 8, 2022
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By STEVE KARNOWSKI – Associated Press

ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) — Teachers in the Minneapolis school district said they would go on strike Tuesday after failing to reach agreement on a new contract, a move that will put some 29,000 students out of work across the board. one of Minnesota’s largest school districts.

Union members said they could not reach an agreement on wages, in particular a ‘living wage’ for education support professionals, as well as caps on class size and more services mental health for students.

“We’re going on strike tomorrow for the safe and stable schools our students deserve,” Greta Cunningham, president of the teachers’ chapter of the Minneapolis Federation of Teachers.

The school district called the news “disappointing” but pledged to “remain at the mediation table non-stop in an effort to reduce the duration and impact of this strike.”

Teachers in the nearby St. Paul School District, which has about 34,000 students, were also in mediated negotiations ahead of a possible strike on Tuesday. Union officials said the issues were largely the same in the two districts.

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State mediators have sought to facilitate the negotiations between administrators and union leaders in both neighborhoods. Districts said virtually all classes would be canceled during a strike, although some school services and sports would continue.

National union leaders say teachers and support staff across the country are experiencing the same kinds of overwork and burnout issues due to the COVID-19 pandemic, but the Twin Cities districts are the only ones great on the verge of a strike. School district officials said they were already facing budget shortfalls due to enrollment losses resulting from the pandemic and could not spend the money they did not have.

The possibility of a strike weighed on parents already strained by the disruption of the pandemic.

Erin Zielinski’s daughter, Sybil, is a freshman at Armatage Community School in southwest Minneapolis. She and her husband support the teachers, although she questions whether the union’s demands are viable.

Zielinski said his family was lucky. She and her husband can count on their parents’ support during a strike, and although he had to return to the office, she still has some flexibility to work remotely. His plan in the event of a teachers’ strike? “Survival,” she laughs.

“You kind of become immune to it, between distance learning and homeschooling, it’s now a way of life, unfortunately,” she said. “My husband and I are going to piece it together.”

Earlier Monday, the Minneapolis district and its teachers seemed resigned to a walkout. The union, in a statement released earlier today, said the district is “not even pretending to avoid a strike.”

St. Paul’s union was more neutral in a statement saying it was considering a new offer that covered the issues with several of its proposals. Superintendent Joe Gothard outlined the proposals in a separate statement Sunday night, saying the district had offered to add language to the contract to keep average class sizes at their current levels, hire four additional school psychologists, pay one-time cash of $2,000 for each syndicate. employee using federal stimulus funds and to raise the salaries of the lowest-paid education assistants.

“This comprehensive settlement offer meets union priorities, does not add to the projected budget shortfall of $42 million next year, and, most importantly, keeps our students, teachers and staff in the classroom,” said writes Gotthard.

Minneapolis has about 29,000 students and 3,265 teachers, while St. Paul has about 34,000 students and 3,250 educators. The average annual salary for teachers in St. Paul is over $85,000, while it is over $71,000 in Minneapolis. However, districts also employ hundreds of lower-paid support staff who often say they don’t earn a living wage, and these workers have been at the center of discussions.

Associated Press writer Doug Glass contributed from Minneapolis.

Copyright 2022 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.

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