The Denver Post

Negotiatio­ns go late into the night

- By Elizabeth Hernandez The Denver Post

As public schools across Denver carried on without many of their regular educators for a second day, negotiator­s working to bring an end to the city’s f irst teachers strike in 25 years spent more than 11 hours trading competing compensati­on proposals Tuesday.

Not satisfied with Denver Public Schools’ incentive-based compensati­on system, the district’s teachers union is looking to secure better and more reliable pay increases — rather than bonuses — as educators advance through their careers.

By press time Tuesday night, the two sides each were still behind closed doors at the Denver Central Library as their bargaining session, which began around 10:30 a.m., continued.

In contrast to the dramatic ending that left district officials and teachers in tears Saturday night, Tuesday’s bargaining over teacher pay appeared more productive, with both sides finding areas of agreement within each other’s latest offers.

Yet gaps in understand­ing remained. As Rob Gould, the lead negotiator for the Denver Classroom Teachers Associatio­n, critiqued an aspect of one of the district’s proposals, he asked DPS Superinten­dent Susana Cordova: “You’re saying we can’t have our cake and eat it, too?”

Cordova, noting the purpose of negotiatio­ns was to breathe new life into the contentiou­s ProComp teacher-compensati­on system, responded: “I thought we were in the process of using new ingredient­s to create a different cake.”

Prior to Tuesday’s resumption of bargaining, the two sides had reached a point where they’re both proposing the same starting base salary for teachers: $45,800 a year. But other areas of contention remain, namely DPS’s reliance on bonuses tied to working in high-poverty schools or student achievemen­t.

The updated proposals floated by DPS and the teachers union Tuesday, and the two sides’ subsequent discussion­s, focused heavily on profession­al developmen­t units, which are free indistrict courses offered to advance teachers’ education.

The union wants teachers to be paid for the amount of PDUs they complete, while the district asked for “guardrails” to be in place so a pay system including profession­al developmen­t would be financiall­y sustainabl­e.

A sticking point for the union remained the district’s requiremen­t to have educators work for 45 hours outside the classroom to earn a PDU. The union said existing rules allow teachers to count the work they do in school toward those courses.

“Teachers work way more than a 40-hour work week, and we don’t want to require anything beyond that,” Gould said.

Cordova said she understood that existing rules allowed teachers to complete their PDUs utilizing time during their workday but that the purpose of negotiatin­g was to find new, improved ways to do things.

Much of the day was spent with an empty bargaining table as representa­tives from the union and district pored over each other’s proposals and made adjustment­s to their own in private.

One of the district’s latest proposals added another opportunit­y for educators to move across a pay scale, upping their salary based on things like college credit attainment, staying within DPS for 10 years, completing profession­al developmen­t units and prominent teacher certificat­ions.

Rachel Lewis, a Columbine Elementary School teacher who has been a steady attendee of the bargaining sessions, said that things really need to start moving to avert more strike days.

“We’re still talking about PDUs,” Lewis said. “There’s so much more to talk about. We’re probably not going to finish talking today, I would think.”

Tuesday’s negotiatio­ns began in the morning following the first day of a teachers strike that saw more than 2,600 educators walk out of their classrooms in the name of fair wages.

“Our students are not receiving the kind of instructio­n right now we all believe is in their best interest,” Cordova said as the session began. “It’s critically important we’re here today to dig in, to get to agreement. I am 100 percent committed to getting there.”

As DPS and union officials spent Tuesday negotiatin­g, teachers continued picketing at schools across Denver, and students at some area high schools walked out in support of their educators, too.

English teacher Jessica Perkins said she was back on the picket line at East High School for a second day because the kids in Denver deserve the best teachers available and higher pay attracts those teachers.

Ada Youngstrom, a freshman at North High School, helped organize a student sit-in and walkout at the school. After students walked around the park across the street, they returned to school. She estimated about 250 students walked out, and most went back to classes.

The energy was high at East and North high schools on Tuesday — music blasted from speakers and people danced, teachers chanted slogans and sign-wavers watched cars honking in support as they passed by.

Brian Buddenhage­n, a teacher at East High and a parent, said he was going to keep striking as long as necessary, a sentiment shared by many of the attendees.

But, as Bruce Randolph School teacher Candace Sell said, “I would like to be back in the classroom with my students as soon as possible.”

 ?? Helen H. Richardson, The Denver Post ?? Denver Public Schools teachers, students and supporters leave Civic Center park to march to the Denver Public Library on Tuesday. This is Denver’s first teachers strike in 25 years.
Helen H. Richardson, The Denver Post Denver Public Schools teachers, students and supporters leave Civic Center park to march to the Denver Public Library on Tuesday. This is Denver’s first teachers strike in 25 years.
 ?? Joe Amon, The Denver Post ?? Students study in class at Dora Moore ECE-8 during the second day of the Denver Public Schools teachers strike on Tuesday.
Joe Amon, The Denver Post Students study in class at Dora Moore ECE-8 during the second day of the Denver Public Schools teachers strike on Tuesday.
 ?? RJ Sangosti, The Denver Post ?? Denver Public Schools Superinten­dent Susana Cordova, near right, and Denver Classroom Teachers Associatio­n lead negotiator Rob Gould are back at the negotiatio­n table Tuesday.
RJ Sangosti, The Denver Post Denver Public Schools Superinten­dent Susana Cordova, near right, and Denver Classroom Teachers Associatio­n lead negotiator Rob Gould are back at the negotiatio­n table Tuesday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States