The Columbus Dispatch

Educators rally outside meeting for union members

- Michael Lee

The Columbus Education Associatio­n rallied outside before Tuesday night’s Columbus City Schools Board of Education meeting, accusing the district of violating their contract by unilateral­ly trying to remove members of a program for homeless students from contract negotiatio­ns.

CEA spokespers­on Regina Fuentes said the district was rewriting the job descriptio­ns of union members who are a part of the district’s Project Connect program – which provides services for homeless students and their families – without talking with the union first.

Fuentes said not only would the reworking of the position result in a pay cut for the school staff who work with the program, but also would “strip them of their union status” so they would no longer be protected under collective bargaining. She added the changes could possibly deter people from applying to work with the program.

“We have nearly or more than 2,000 children (and their families) in the district who utilize these resources,” Fuentes said. “What the district in a nutshell is trying to do is go behind the scenes without having any type of discussion with us.”

In a press release, the union stated that it obtained an internal Columbus City Schools email in response to a public records request which allegedly proves that the district rewrote the Project Connect program bargaining members’ agreements without conversing with the union.

The CEA said the action is “a violation of the collective bargaining agreement and state law.”

“Our students who are experienci­ng homelessne­ss are not second-class

citizens and deserve the same access to CEA profession­als as all of our other students,” said CEA President John Coneglio in the release. “The district's unilateral decision to outsource these jobs shines a bright light on the lengths the district is willing to go to deprioriti­ze the resources our vulnerable students need.”

In a statement, Columbus City Schools did not address the allegation­s of a contract violation. The district stated it “created new employment classifica­tions within the classified civil service” – academic youth support advocates and a student services program coordinato­r – to provide “non-instructio­nal support for homeless students and their families.”

The district added that students will not “receive any lesser services than provided in the past.”

“We treasure every student who walks through our doors, regardless of where they attend school or where they reside. We want all students to be successful and will provide them with the tools they need to advance in the classroom and in life. All of our students, including our homeless students, receive instructio­n from our dedicated, licensed teachers.” the statement read.

“Change, even when challengin­g, is sometimes necessary. But the bottom line is that we will always keep our students as our top priority.”

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