The Boston Globe

Andover schools shutter as teachers strike over stalled negotiatio­ns

Seek boost in instructio­nal aides’ wages, benefits, 16 percent teacher pay increase

- By Niki Griswold GLOBE STAFF

ANDOVER — Andover Public Schools’ 10 campuses shuttered Friday as more than 800 teachers in the district went on strike to protest stalled contract negotiatio­ns with the School Committee.

A sousaphone bearing the message “Settle the Contract” provided the soundtrack for hundreds of educators, joined by dozens of students and parents, who picketed in the Town Common Friday afternoon, filling the lawn in front of the Andover Town Offices.

Many held signs that read, “Andover Educators on Strike!,” “I’d rather be teaching, but this is important,” and “Pay IAs a living wage!”

The Andover Education Associatio­n, the union that represents more than 800 educators in the district, voted overwhelmi­ngly Thursday night to go on strike in protest of the lack of agreement on a new contract with the School Committee after more than nine months of negotiatio­ns. One of the highest priority demands is a significan­t raise and improved benefits for instructio­nal aides in the district, whose starting pay is $19.26 an hour, or $25,000 a year. The union describes the wage as “far below what is considered a living wage for the region.” The maximum an instructio­nal aide in the district can make is $38,000 a year, according to the union.

Jay Hudak, who has worked as an instructio­nal aide in Andover for 20 years, said Friday that while a raise for her and her colleagues is essential, the strike is about more than just the money.

“There’s just such disrespect for what we do . ... I’ve often said, ‘Why don’t you just come into our room and spend a day, walk in our shoes, just follow us and see what we actually do?’” Hudak said. “People have two jobs, and they’re like, ‘Well, who cares? That’s not our problem.’”

Among the union’s other demands are across-the-board raises for teachers, protection­s for educator prep time, longer lunch and recess periods

for younger students, expanded paid family and medical leave, and more educator input in curriculum decisions.

“In Andover traditiona­lly, this has been a lighthouse district for public education,” said Julian DiGloria, an eighth grade social studies teacher in the district and the union’s vice president. “We are doing this to keep it that way.”

A coalition of 23 other local unions issued a statement of support for the Andover Education Associatio­n and the strike, and several attended Friday’s protest in a show of solidarity. Andover teachers, union leaders, and instructio­nal aides shared testimony with the crowd, as did several parents and students in the district.

“I am absolutely appalled that our school committee has dragged our teachers through the mud for the last 10 months in negotiatio­ns since January,” parent Maura McCardy Santiago said to the rally-goers, wiping tears from her eyes. “On behalf of every parent in this town, I am so proud of all of the teachers here today for standing up for themselves and for making the most heart wrenching decision to go on strike today. These teachers deserve more.”

“The things that our teachers have done support us through the years of COVID, all these crazy times in our lives, is truly inspiring, and now’s our chance to stand up for them. So we will carry on that spirit. Educators, we students stand with you,” said Mitran Kumar, a 17-yearold junior at Andover High.

It is illegal for public employees to strike in Massachuse­tts. However, that has not stopped teachers unions in Brookline, Woburn, Malden, and Haverhill from going on strike in recent years. In Andover, teachers went on strike in 2020 over concerns about safe working conditions during the pandemic, which the state’s labor relations board ruled was illegal.

In a statement Friday, a representa­tive for the School Committee announced that the Commonweal­th Employment Relations Board at the Department of Labor Relations ruled Thursday that the Andover educators’ strike violates the law, and the School Committee intends to take further legal action to force the union to end the strike.

“We want to make it clear that the School Committee does not condone the illegal actions of the AEA,” said Tracey Spruce, chair of the Andover School Committee, in a statement to the community Thursday. “We will work with the Department of Labor Relations to minimize the disruption to our students’ education. We urge all teachers and staff to return to school. We urge the AEA to end their illegal strike and return to the bargaining table.”

But union leadership refused to back down Friday despite facing the prospect of facing significan­t fines if the strike continues in violation of the court order.

“What the district is looking to do is obviously punish us for standing up for our students and for ourselves,” said DiGloria. “And frankly, there wouldn’t need to be any fines, a strike wouldn’t need to happen, if the school committee would bargain in good faith and give us a fair, reasonable offer. The school committee can end this today.”

The School Committee’s most recent proposal includes raising starting salary for an entry-level instructio­nal aide to $32,889, and $42,137 for a senior-level instructio­nal aide, after three years. It offers to raise startingle­vel teacher salaries to $58,870, which would be a 23 percent raise, and top-level teacher salaries to $118,882, an 11 percent raise, after three years.

DiGloria said those terms are not acceptable for the union, which wants to see the minimum salary for instructio­nal aides raised to $40,000 a year, and a 16 percent raise for all teachers across the board, rather than increases targeted primarily at the lowest and highest paid teachers in the district.

“They’re trying to divide our union by doing that,” said DiGloria. “We want (the 16 percent raise) across the board for everyone, everyone’s entitled to the same cost of living adjustment.” Housing costs in Andover are high, with the median home value at $900,000, compared to $591,000 across the state as a whole, according to Zillow.

According to state data, the average teacher salary in Andover in 2021 was just over $100,000, though the lowestpaid teachers make tens of thousands below that amount.

Andover Public Schools will remain closed for the duration of the strike, the district announced Thursday, though sports and theater rehearsals will be allowed to continue.

 ?? PHOTOS BY JOSH REYNOLDS FOR THE BOSTON GLOBE ?? Striking Andover teachers and supporters rallied in front of the town offices Friday.
PHOTOS BY JOSH REYNOLDS FOR THE BOSTON GLOBE Striking Andover teachers and supporters rallied in front of the town offices Friday.
 ?? ?? Julian DiGloria, an eighth grade social studies teacher in the district and the union’s vice president, spoke at the rally.
Julian DiGloria, an eighth grade social studies teacher in the district and the union’s vice president, spoke at the rally.
 ?? JOSH REYNOLDS FOR THE BOSTON GLOBE ?? Andover teachers and supporters rallied in favor of the teachers’ strike Friday as schools were shuttered by the strike.
JOSH REYNOLDS FOR THE BOSTON GLOBE Andover teachers and supporters rallied in favor of the teachers’ strike Friday as schools were shuttered by the strike.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States