Striking Seattle teachers reach tentative deal with district
SEATTLE -- Seattle teachers reached a tentative agreement with the city's school district as their strike entered its fifth day Tuesday, but they will stay on the picket lines pending its approval.
The sides reached a deal, but the Seattle teachers union's executive board and representative assembly must sign off on it before the strike can end, Washington Education Association spokesman Rich Wood said. No details about the terms of the agreement were immediately released.
"We have a tentative agreement with the district! Go to your picket site this morning to learn more!" the Seattle Education Association told its members in a text message Tuesday.
Seattle Public Schools spokeswoman Stacy Howard said the agreement came at 6:50 a.m. following an overnight bargaining session and that the district hoped classes would begin Thursday.
The sides have been negotiating over issues that include teacher pay, evaluations and the length of the school day. The teachers walked out Sept. 9, delaying the start of the school year for 53,000 students.
Educators complained that living expenses have become unaffordable as the city's high-paid technology industry booms and they have gone six years without a cost-of-living increase. The district provided raises totaling 8 percent out of local levy money in that time.
School librarian Sean Harvey picketed Tuesday outside Loyal Heights Elementary, saying he and his colleagues all want to go back to work, but "it isn't over until it's over."
The Seattle City Council threw its support behind the striking teachers in the state's largest school district Monday, passing a resolution recognizing the union. The council voted unanimously to designate this week "Seattle Educators Week."
Councilwoman Kshama Sawant said that if the union wins, it will be a huge step forward for students and educators, but it would also resonate outside Seattle.
"A victory for the union is also a victory for education across the country. It shows that if we organize and remain united, we can resist attacks on public education," she said.
Meanwhile, Mayor Ed Murray said he met separately with district Superintendent Larry Nyland and union President Jonathan Knapp to offer his help and urge them to reach a fair agreement that would allow the school year to begin as soon as possible.
Pay has been a big sticking point. The union made a counterproposal over the weekend that called for raises totaling 9.75 percent over two years - far less than the 21 percent over three years they initially sought.
Teacher salaries in Seattle range from about $44,000 to more than $86,000, depending on experience and education.
CBS Seattle affiliate KIRO reports the school district says the strike is costing them roughly $100,000 for each day missed, but they have not broken down how they arrived at that number. The teachers' union says they're curious what the expenses are when teachers aren't being paid, according to the station.
This year, lawmakers - facing a court order to increase spending on education - came up with money for new teachers and supplies. Some $37 million of that will go to Seattle. The district says it has offered raises totaling 14 percent over three years - including cost-of-living adjustments from the state - but it also wants to extend the school day by 20 minutes, arguing that Seattle has one of the shortest instructional days in the state, at 6 hours and 10 minutes.
The union said the proposal would have forced teachers to work that extra time for free. Over the weekend, the district offered to pay teachers for the added instructional minutes, Howard said. The union proposed studying the pros and cons of an extended school day.
Some teachers and parents said they were eager to see what's in the deal. Jeanne Bastasch, a gym teacher at Greenwood Elementary, said she won't vote for just anything.
Parent Heather Dachary joined the picket line at that school Tuesday with her two children and said teachers shouldn't have to.
"I really want my kids back in school, but I want it done fairly," she said.