NEA-Santa Fe Actionline --Online

Friday, August 25, 2006

LABOR DAY CELEBRATION!

Celebrate Labor Day with the Family Justice Campaign!

Where? The Roundhouse State Capitol Building, East Entrance When? Monday, Labor Day, September 4th at 12:00 Noon Featuring Music & Inspiring Words in Spanish & English

► Mariachi Buena Ventura
► Singer Bonnie Greathouse of ACORN
► Andé Marimba
► Michael Davis, President, NM NAACP
► The Honorable Ben Lujan, Speaker of the House
► Mayor David Coss, City of Santa Fe
► The Rev Msgr Jerome Martinez y Alire, Cathedral Basilica of St. Francis
► Rayos Burciaga, Somos Un Pueblo Unido

Sponsored by: NAACP ► AFSCME ► NM Coalition for Justice ► NM Department of Peace Initiative ► Drug Policy Alliance of New Mexico ► New Mexicans for a Fair Wage ► NM Coalition to Repeal the Death Penalty ► NM Conference of Churches ► NM Voter Services Coalition ► Northern New Mexico Central Labor Council (AFL— CIO) ► Santa Fe Living Wage Network ► Somos Un Pueblo Unido ►

Bring your family & a picnic lunch! For more information call 505-471-6633

Saturday, August 19, 2006

"BLACKBOARD JUNGLE"

An article in the Santa Fe Reporter
By Nathan Dinsdale

Published: August 16, 2006

The good news is Santa Fe Public Schools and the local National Education Association teachers union reached a temporary agreement on Aug. 10 to raise employee salaries by at least 5 percent.

The bad news is the Memorandum Of Understanding (MOU) regarding the raise is basically the only thing the two sides have agreed on after months of wrangling that may land both parties in District Court.

That’s because SFPS and NEA-Santa Fe are awaiting a verdict from state Public Employee Labor Relations Board (PELRB) hearing officer Pilar Vaile on complaints filed by each side earlier this year.

The drama began in April when NEA-Santa Fe President Koo Im Tong expressed her disapproval at a school board meeting of the district’s hiring of labor lawyer Dina Holcomb (who did not respond to an interview request) to handle union contract negotiations.

The union interpreted the hiring as hostile, an assertion that SFPS lead negotiator and Deputy Superintendent Bobbie Gutierrez denies.

“That was not the district’s intent at all,” Gutierrez says. “The intent was simply to have a professional help train us because the entire bargaining team for the district is new.”

In fact, both sides of the bargaining table are new after the district’s lead negotiator retired earlier this year and the NEA-Santa Fe executive board underwent an overhaul in the spring. But inexperience isn’t the only complication.

Soon after Tong spoke at the board meeting, NEA-Santa Fe placed information about ongoing contract proposals in the mailboxes of union employees. The district subsequently halted negotiations and filed a “bad-faith bargaining” complaint with the PELRB. The union responded by filing a complaint alleging the district was refusing to bargain.

“Basically the school district took speech they didn’t like and slapped a ‘bad-faith bargaining’ label on it,” says union lawyer Andy Lewinter. “This isn’t Mexico, it’s New Mexico. The First Amendment applies to Santa Fe Public Schools employees as much as it does anyone else in this country.”

The union considers the conflict a free-speech issue while the district alleges the union violated bargaining ground rules by sharing details of ongoing negotiations.

“We never agreed to not share information with our members,” Tong says. “In fact, I think that we have a responsibility to keep our members informed.”

Instead, Tong (also a Santa Fe High math teacher) views the district’s complaint as an attempt to strip teachers of First Amendment rights while breaking the union financially. Furthermore, she says the “pointless litigation” has been rendered moot now that both sides have amicably resumed negotiations.

Certainly, news of the salary raise was encouraging, but neither side expects a contract when school starts on Aug. 28.

“It’s very unlikely,” Tong says. “But we’re not as concerned with how long it takes as we are about making sure we get a good agreement.”

That will take more time (and resources) considering the district has refused a union proposal to drop the complaints. Gutierrez says the district merely wants to clarify acceptable conduct for future negotiations.

“This has never been punitive on our part,” Gutierrez says. “We are simply looking for some guidance and direction about how to play by the rules and engage in good-faith bargaining on both sides.”

Some guidance may come when Vaile announces her verdict later this month, but it won’t be the final word. The union plans to appeal an adverse decision if necessary.

“This is an important constitutional issue,” Lewinter says. “Teachers should be able to stand up and voice their opinions without worrying that they’ll wake up the next day with a complaint filed against them.”

© Copyright 2000-2006 by the Santa Fe Reporter

Friday, August 11, 2006

TEMPORARY AGREEMENT REACHED

SF Public Schools: Union workers will receive 5 percent raise

By JOHN SENA, The New Mexican
August 11, 2006

Santa Fe school officials and the union that represents a majority of the district's employees reached a temporary agreement Thursday that gives a minimum 5 percent raise to union employees.

The raises are more than mandated by legislators this spring, when they called for a 5 percent average raise. The mandate could have meant some workers receive larger raises than others as long as they equaled the 5 percent average.

Board members called for the 5 percent minimum during budget talks so Thursday's agreement didn't come as a surprise.

``We're very pleased to go ahead and implement pay raises,'' said Bobbie Gutierrez, deputy superintendent and lead negotiator for the district.

National Education Association-Santa Fe officials cautioned the agreement is only temporary and they will continue to negotiate for higher salaries.

Gutierrez said if negotiations result in additional raises, those will be made retroactive.

By signing the temporary agreement, the NEA guaranteed its employees that raises will be in place at the beginning of the school year, something that hasn't happened in recent years. Last year, workers didn't receive contracts until after the holiday break.

Negotiations between the school district and the NEA usually begin in late spring.
The agreement calls for the district to give a 9.5 percent raise to educational assistants, which is in line with mandates from legislators.

With the raises, the average salary for teachers, not including benefits, is $41,782, according to district officials. The Santa Fe area's median family income is $58,200, according to the federal Housing and Urban Development Department, which adjusts that amount based on family size.

Thursday's deal comes after a contentious period between the school district and union officials. The district claimed the union had violated ground rules by distributing negotiation details in teachers' mailboxes. Union officials disputed the claim.

As a result, both parties filed complaints with the state's labor relations board. The labor board has held two hearings, but a decision is still pending.

Despite the complaints, both school and union officials said the agreement went toward repairing relations between the two groups. ``I believe this is a very positive step,'' said Koo Im Tong, NEA-Santa Fe president.

Contact John Sena at 995-3812 or jsena@sfnewmexican.com.

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