Massachusetts

Despite some progress, no classes Monday as North Shore teacher strikes continue

Teacher strikes are illegal in Massachusetts, and districts are facing growing fines

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There were talks of progress over the weekend but not enough as the mediation Saturday and Sunday failed to produce contracts in any of the three North Shore communities where teachers are on strike.

Classes will be cancelled again Monday in Gloucester, Beverly and Marblehead, Massachusetts, as negotiations continue between those school committees and teachers unions.

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In Marblehead, members of both sides were still meeting Sunday night without any significant agreements between the bargaining parties, according to a press release from the school committee, which said the illegal strike is expected to continue unfortunately.

Marblehead families were notified at 6 p.m. Sunday that schools would be closed to start the week so that they could plan for child care and make necessary arrangements, the school committee said, adding that families would be immediately notified if an agreement is reached.

Gloucester's superintendent also cancelled school Monday, saying the days are being added to the end of the school year, similar to snow days. With Monday's cancellation, the district's last day is currently set for June 26. The school committee there has said progress was made this weekend, specifically with negotiations involving paraprofessionals.

And in Beverly, the president of the school committee said negotiations had unfortunately ended for the evening, and they had to cancel school again Monday as they begin a third week of "disruption." Negotiations were expected to resume at 10:30 a.m. Monday.

"The School Committee provided the [Beverly Teachers Association] with comprehensive counter proposals for both our educators and paraprofessionals that addressed areas still unresolved. Throughout the day, we continued to put forth strong offers that provided additional district-paid parental leave, more access to paid family medical leave, language related to preparation time, an expanded paraprofessional to educator pipeline, and opportunities for educators to obtain graduate credits and advance up the salary scale at a faster rate. All of these were areas of concern shared by the BTA negotiators," Rachael Abell said in a statement, adding that the school committee sincerely hopes the teachers association is seriously reviewing their latest offer.

"We are disappointed by refusals by the BTA leadership to negotiate or alter their demands on issues like salaries and to change baseline agreements like the length of the contract in a way that moves the goal posts and sets us further back," Abell continued.

Members of the school committee had said they were happy with the counterproposal Sunday but that they remained far apart on compensation. The mayor says they've offered about $24.45 million in new money over three years, including a roughly 27% salary increase for teachers and a 43% wage increase for paraprofessionals.

Schools will remain closed Monday in Beverly, Gloucester and Marblehead if no agreement can be reached.

One Beverly teacher told NBC10 Boston Sunday morning that it's really disheartening that schools have been closed for as long as they have been.

"That that falls squarely on the school committee and the mayor’s lack of leadership and commitment to getting this deal done," she said. "We could have had this done in the summer before school even started this school year so we’re frustrated but we are resolved and committed and we will not go back to the classroom until we have the contract that works for ourselves and our students.”

According to Abell, the school committee is beginning to have "challenging conversations" about how and where to make up the six school days that students there have missed.

"We remain committed to bringing our students and educators back as soon as possible and continue to offer the opportunity for educators to return to their classrooms and resume bargaining after school hours until we can reach an agreement," Abell said.

Sticking points in negotiations have revolved around class sizes, wages, longer lunch and recess for students, paid parental leave, tuition reimbursement, and the ability for workers to use sick days to take care of sick loved ones.

Teacher strikes in Massachusetts are illegal, and several districts are facing growing fines, including in Beverly, where there will be a court hearing on the matter at 2 p.m. Monday.

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