This post will be updated.
Thousands of Sacramento public school teachers are participating in a one-day strike Thursday, demanding lower class sizes and other school improvements they say the district promised but never delivered.
Educators and their supporters, including students, picketed outside C.K. McClatchy High School held signs that read “Honor our Contract,” “Keep Your Promises to Our Kids” and “Unfair Labor Practices Strike” and chanted “students deserve lower class sizes” and “chop, chop from the top.”
The Sacramento City Teachers Association, the union representing some 2,800 teachers, nurses and resource specialists, accuses the school district of backtracking on the terms of its 2017 agreement and engaging in unlawful labor practices. As part of that deal, the union claims the district committed to reducing class sizes and hiring more nurses and counselors with funds it saved from switching to a cheaper health plan.
âWe donât want to go on a strike, but that is our lawful way of getting the district to live up to its commitments,â SCTA President David Fisher wrote to the district last month.
Lily Jamali on Twitter Chop, chop, from the top.” Teachers in the Sacramento City Unified School District are staging a one-day strike. Unlike other places where teachers have walked out, they already have a contract. Now, they want to make sure its terms are honored. â¦@KQEDnewsâ© https://t.co/ThiP45uCAx
But officials with the Sacramento City Unified School District, which is grappling with a $35 million deficit and faces the threat of a state takeover, argues that the union is misinterpreting the agreement, and that the savings must first be used to address the urgent budget crisis. The district has until the end of June to balance its budget, and is considering employee layoffs and program cuts.
âWe have been seeking to work with you to honor the agreement as we understand it,â Superintendent Jorge Aguilar wrote to the teachers union earlier this month.
As roughly 42,000 students and their families braced for the walkout, district spokesman Alex Barrios on Wednesday said that schools would remain open, with classes staffed by substitutes, school meals served and regular bus routes in place.
Last month, teachers voted overwhelmingly in favor of authorizing the strike, and the union recently confirmed the walkout following several failed mediation attempts with the district. Teachers plan to rally at noon outside the district’s headquarters.
It marks the latest in a string of high-profile teacher strikes around the country over the last year, including recent walkouts in Oakland in February and Los Angeles in January.
Sacramento teachers last went on strike 30 years ago.
KQED’s Lily Jamali contributed to this post.
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