Tuesday, February 22, 2011

Montgomery High Principal Suggests Salary Cuts






South County principal calls for salary cuts to save teachers

TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 2011 AT 6 A.M.

— Montgomery High School Principal Lee Romero sees the $24 million deficit the Sweetwater Union High School District is trying to close in its $320 million budget throughlayoffs and wonders if there isn’t a better solution.

Such as salary cuts.

Romero said he and his wife, who is a teacher, along with others would be willing to take a pay cut if it meant saving the four instructors slated to be laid off at his school if class sizes grow from 31 to 34 students, as proposed by the district.

“At what point do we do the right thing and take the cuts away from the classroom, because it is going to hurt our kids? Nobody including the district, including the unions, are talking about taking a pay cut,” Romero said. “If we go this route (by increasing class sizes), it is going to be bad for everybody.”

Alex Anguiano, president of the teachers union, said it was premature to discuss the possibility of salary cuts because negotiations on a new contract have not formally begun. But did express dissatisfaction with other areas of the district’s budget.

“Our district is spending money like there is not an economic crisis at all, so if we evaluate economy based on what school board has been approving, then there is not an economic crisis,” he said. “There are already less teachers. Classrooms are pretty overcrowded. That was our contribution to this fiscal crisis. We have already paid significantly.”

Among the teachers Romero expects to lose under seniority rules that come into effect during layoffs is special education teacher Juan Carrillo and county Teacher of the Year nominee Rhea Walker. They have been teaching for four years and 11 years, respectively.

According to Romero, those who could lose their jobs have contributed to his campus seeing an 85-point increase on the state’s performance index.

“To have more students in a classroom means more special ed students in a classroom, and it almost seems impossible,” Carrillo said.

Romero said no one should be laid off.

“In my 24 years of education, I have never seen a teacher released due to their ineffectiveness,” Romero said. “To lose some of the people who work the most or are effective, that’s just not right.”

Walker can see both sides of the tenure system.

“Time and again you have proven your worth, but the bottom line is still the dollars,” Walker said. “You are thankful and grateful to have something there to guarantee you have a job, but at the same time it’s a double-edged sword.”

Romero said pay cuts need to be addressed.

“There’s 10 percent unemployment in California and people are taking cuts, but we have not,” he said.

About 110 pink slips were issued last year; all but six Spanish teachers were called back to work. Administrators are taking four furloughs this year.

Anguiano said the union will defer to the will of its members in matters such as class size and salary reductions. The bargaining team for the union will be seeking member input through a series of open hearings and a survey, he said.

The district cut $11 million from this year’s budget to help close a more than $23 million deficit. The shortfall was covered with stimulus funds and previously restricted money that the state freed up for use in other areas.

ashly.mcglone@uniontrib.com • (619) 293-1725 • Twitter @newswriter_gal



Sunday, February 6, 2011

Early Retirement & Calendar: UT reports

Check out this link--

Prop O Monies Shiftily Shifted


District Prop O Monies Shiftily Shifted

The articles below trace the Union Trib's tracking of tax payer monies at SUHSD culminating in an editorial denouncing the deed.

January 26: SD Union Trib reports that the district is borrowing from Prop O

http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/2011/jan/26/sweetwater-is-borrowing-from-its-school-bonds/

https://www.signonsandiego.com/news/2011/jan/27/auditor-finds-issues-sweetwater-borrowing/

January 31: Sweetwater Reverses Course after Cititzens and Taxpayers Question Decision

http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/2011/jan/31/sweetwater-reverses-course-bond-borrowing

February 3: Union Tribune Editorializes: Enough!

http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/2011/feb/03/school-district-maneuvers-on-the-odd-side/


2:30 AM Friday Morning: National City Teachers Will Teach

Via twitter, teachers to be in classrooms on Friday morning. See the articles below from the San Diego Union Tribune and KPBS.


http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/2011/feb/03/national-city-teachers-prepare-walk-negotiations-c

SignOnSanDiego.com

Better relations sought between district, teachers

Averted strike, new contract raise hopes for better atmosphere

ORIGINALLY PUBLISHED FEBRUARY 4, 2011 AT 5:40 P.M., UPDATED FEBRUARY 4, 2011 AT 8:13 P.M.

Second grade teacher Jolene Vermillion is hugged by her students Friday as they head off to class at Palmer Way Elementary School in National City after a planned teacher strike was called off.

JOHN GIBBINS /P>

Second grade teacher Jolene Vermillion is hugged by her students Friday as they head off to class at Palmer Way Elementary School in National City after a planned teacher strike was called off.

With the threat of a strike over, school opened as usual in National City on Friday with administrators and some teachers vowing to forge a better relationship.

A marathon 18-hour negotiating session ended at 2:30 a.m. — in time to avert what would have been the first teachers strike in San Diego County in 15 years.

Replacing working conditions imposed by the school board in July is a tentative three-year labor pact between the National School District and its 354 teachers. The agreement includes compromises — for both parties — on everything from furlough days to class size caps.

“We’ve come through a very stressful period of time this past year when both sides have experienced great frustrations,” Superintendent Chris Oram said in a prepared statement. “It’s now time to come together, put our differences behind us and refocus on providing the quality of education our parents and others have come to expect from our district schools.”

The National City Elementary Teachers Association celebrated the end to the bitter impasse that has persisted since March.

“We are happy that after many hours of intensive negotiations we were able to come to an agreement for the benefit of our students and the community,” said union president Linda Cartwright.

Teachers and parents learned of the settlement hours before the morning school bell sounded in the district’s 10 elementary campuses mostly through a Twitter feed and word-of-mouth.

But not everyone got wind of the news. More than 17 percent of the district’s 5,800 students failed to show up to class, that’s four times the typical absentee rate. About 93 percent of the district’s teachers reported to the classroom. Even some of the some 254 substitute teachers tapped in case of a strike showed up amid confusion over whether their services were needed. All of them will be paid $250 for the day — more than twice the regular substitute rate, district officials said.

The tentative contract is set to be ratified by both parties next week. Many said they were hopeful that will lead to a new atmosphere in the district.

“The fact that they were able to craft an agreement under these difficult circumstances is a good sign that this could lead to ... the start of a collaborative relationship and not an adversarial one,” said Bill Guy, a spokesman for the California Teachers Association.

But some hard feelings remain.

“We would like to find out when the public apology comes for all the stress that they’ve caused the teachers and the parents and the kids,” said Matt Crosbie, a teacher at Palmer Way Elementary School.

Several parents expressed relief that the dispute is over.

“I’m so excited it was resolved,” said Sherrie Cabarles, a National City parent and school volunteer. “The kids do not have to suffer.”

National City teachers have been working under conditions imposed by the school board in July after the district rejected a nonbinding compromise by an independent mediator. Their contract expired June 30.

The proposed agreement hammered out Friday morning calls for four furlough days in each year of the contract; aligning the elementary school district’s calendar with the Sweetwater Union High School District, which also serves National City; and setting class sizes at 22 students in kindergarten through third grade and 33 students in grades four through six for this school year and next.

If education funding improves, furlough days could be reduced, and 22-student class sizes in the lower grades could continue through 2012-13, according to the settlement.

The district had sought to close a $3 million deficit in its $53.7 million operating budget largely through six furlough days this year under the conditions imposed in July.

Union leaders had argued that the district could have tapped more of its $8.6 million reserve account to help balance its budget. But district officials said much of that money is actually deferred funding from the state. They said it’s not certain that money will materialize, given the state’s budget problems.

“We’re ready to reduce and even eventually eliminate the number of furlough days if the state restores enough funds for us to be able to do so,” Oram said. “Meanwhile, we have no choice but to live within our means and keep expenses in line with revenues.”

The district said it was crucial to establish a three-year contract, even though the union initially wanted a shorter agreement.

Teachers voted Dec. 16 to authorize a strike, and the union’s executive board on Tuesday called for the walkout to begin Friday.

A walkout in National City would have been the first in the county since 1996 when teachers from the San Diego Unified School District staged a five-day strike. It would have be the third teacher walkout in Southern California in less than a year, after La Habra and San Juan Capistrano.

maureen.magee@uniontrib.com (619) 293-1369

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© Copyright 2011 The San Diego Union-Tribune LLC.


— A teachers strike has been averted in National City. That means 350 public school teachers will stay in their classrooms today.

The teachers union and district officials in the National School District reached a tentative agreement after 18 hours of intense negotiations.

Union organizer Bill Guy said the agreement came within hours of when teachers were expected to hit the picket lines.

"You talk about the last hour, this was really the last hour," he said. "Our teachers really hoped they wouldn't have to strike and it's good news all around."

Both sides have been locked in a bitter dispute since last year when the district imposed furlough days, a modified school calendar, and larger class sizes without the union's consent.

District officials issued a statement indicating teachers agreed to realign their school calendar. In exchange, the district will maintain class sizes to and scale back on furlough days if the state restores education funding.

The deal now needs to be ratified.