Dayton Daily News

Dayton strike talks: What issues remain?

Talks will examine what issues divide teachers, district.

- By Grant Pepper and Jeremy P. Kelley Staff Writers

Dayton Public Schools and its teachers union will meet in mediation today, seeking to resolve several key issues.

Today, Dayton Public Schools and its teachers union will meet in mediation, seeking to resolve several key issues that have prevented a contract agreement and resulted in a strike vote.

It has been nearly seven months since the negotiatio­ns began, and the school year starts Aug. 15.

Dayton teachers union President David Romick said Tuesday that he classified “all of the issues remaining on the table as issues of respect for Dayton teachers.”

If the two sides don’t reach a tentative contract agreement by Aug. 11, the union will go on strike. Along with negotiatio­ns about health insurance, here are some of the other key issues that still divide the teachers and the district:

Pay

The union feels that Dayton’s current teacher salaries are “not competitiv­e” and have contribute­d to high staff turnover in the district.

“We are attempting to make them more competitiv­e and to stem that turnover, which is not good for children,” Romick said.

Starting salaries in Dayton ranked 14th of 45 area districts in 2015-16, as teachers starting with a bachelor’s degree earned $37,336 per year, just above the area’s median of $36,400. Longterm amounts were less competitiv­e, however, as DPS’ most experience­d teachers with a master’s degree would earn just over $66,000. That maximum master’s salary ranked 38th of those 45 districts, with most districts

falling between $61,000 and $85,000.

Additional staff

Teachers have lobbied for the addition of school staff members who would provide guidance for students beyond the basic classroom. They have pushed for the district to hire additional guidance counselors and library staff members, among other positions.

Romick said that the middle schools and elementari­es had no counselors last school year. Romick also said that more ELL (English language learners) teachers are needed, given the influx of refugee students that the district has seen.

The district has four people acting in library media roles, spread across four high schools. DPS also has 12 certified school counselors, spread across seven schools, according to school officials.

“We are working to find a model that is fiscally responsibl­e and creates access and availabili­ty for all of our students in every school building,” district HR director Judy Spurlock said in May of the library issue.

Planning time

Teachers and the district have argued about teacher planning time during the negotiatio­n period. Romick said in June that teachers need an increased amount of planning time. “With all the requiremen­ts that have been heaped on teachers by the state, teachers need an increased amount of planning time,” Romick said.

Time clocks

Romick called it disrespect­ful that the district planned to require teachers to “clock in” via thumbprint time clocks and actually installed the devices in schools while negotiatio­ns were ongoing. Corr said she understand­s the union’s position about that plan, which was in the works before she arrived.

She plans to talk to the school board about it. She called the teachers “absolute profession­als” and said if teachers were eventually required to clock in, she would require her central office staff to clock in, too, and would do so herself.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Dayton Education Associatio­n members Tuesday protested the lack of a new contract with Dayton Public Schools. Teachers have authorized a strike if a deal is not reached by Aug. 11.
CONTRIBUTE­D Dayton Education Associatio­n members Tuesday protested the lack of a new contract with Dayton Public Schools. Teachers have authorized a strike if a deal is not reached by Aug. 11.

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