New York City teachers have approved a nine-year labor contract, their union announced on Tuesday, a deal that raises pay by 18 percent but leaves questions about the future of their health benefits.
The
agreement, which includes billions of dollars in back pay, is likely to
set the standard for several other municipal unions that, like the
teachers’ union, were left without contracts in the final years of Mayor
Michael R. Bloomberg’s administration.
The
contract, brokered between city and union officials, passed with more
than 77 percent of the roughly 90,000 votes cast, union officials said
Tuesday night. Michael F. Mulgrew, president of the United Federation of
Teachers, spent the last month lobbying hard for his members to accept the deal, saying it was the best they could expect.
He faced the most skepticism
over two facets of the deal: that the retroactive raises, which total
about 8 percent, would be paid out over several years, instead of
immediately; and that it promised to reduce health care costs by $1.3
billion. The union said that it could reach that goal by finding more
efficient ways to deliver care.
But
many teachers said they worried about a provision in the contract that
could require them to contribute to their premiums for the first time
should the savings come up short.
But
few expected the deal would be voted down. The union has rejected a
contract only once before, in 1995, when they were asked to accept a
two-year wage freeze. After some modifications, teachers approved that
deal.
On
this contract, teachers mostly agreed with Mr. Mulgrew that this was
the best they could get. Some who voted yes also described it as an
embrace of Mayor Bill de Blasio, whom they consider friendlier to labor than Mr. Bloomberg, whose emphasis on test scores and pay freezes had raised their ire.
“The
last mayor was not very pro-teacher and wasn’t interested in our well
being,” said Suzette Freedman, a third-grade teacher at Public School
75, on Manhattan’s Upper West Side, who voted for the contract. “There’s
not really another option.”
A
fourth-grade teacher at the school, Elizabeth Jarrett, said she voted
no, as a sort of protest, because there seemed to be so many outstanding
questions, particularly about the financing. “But do I think we’re
going to get anything better?” she said. “Absolutely not.”
The financial aspects of the deal also worried some observers.
Moody’s, the bond-rating agency, said the contract resolved
long-standing budgetary uncertainty but that its costs would add to
future deficits and its health savings could face “roadblocks.” The city
comptroller discovered basic accounting problems with the deal the de
Blasio administration struck, asserting that certain costs in the
contract be accounted for in earlier city budget years.
The
results of the vote were tabulated by the American Arbitration
Association, which collected anonymous ballots that had been distributed
to 106,000 unionized workers, including 80,000 teachers.
“We
are going to help good educators stay and grow in this profession, and
usher real reform that will lift up kids across the whole system,” the
mayor said in a statement after the results were announced. “At the same
time, we are securing unprecedented health care savings, which make
this a fiscally responsible contract that protects our budgets and our
taxpayers.”
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The contract
holds the workday to 6 hours and 20 minutes, and raises the starting
salary to $56,709 by the end of the contract, from $45,530, the union
said. It raises the top salary to $119,471 from $100,049. Teachers
nominated by principals to be mentors for other teachers are eligible
for bonuses of $7,500 to $20,000.
The
contract allows some schools, with teachers’ consent, to adopt more
flexible work rules, an attempt to mimic successful charter schools. It
also replaces time set aside for tutoring struggling students with time
for more teacher training and parent-teacher communication, a change the
administration says will improve student and teacher performance over
all. It will also give the Department of Education more authority to
fire some of the 1,200 teachers who draw full salaries but have no
permanent positions, from the so-called absent teacher reserve, the bulk
of whom are casualties of the Bloomberg era’s moves to close and
reorganize schools.
“The
new agreement gives teachers and parents a larger voice in how their
schools are run, and how they can better serve their students,” Mr.
Mulgrew said in a statement Tuesday. “We now have to work together —
teachers, parents and the D.O.E. — to make these innovations
successful.”
In
its review of the contract, Educators 4 Excellence, an advocacy group
of teachers that often was aligned with the Bloomberg administration’s
goals, gave the contract a barely passing grade and said it “overlooked
several critical issues,” such as class sizes and a tenure-granting
process that the group believes ought to be more closely linked to
teacher performance. Still, the review said, the contract “leaves room
for optimism,” for a work force thirsty for a new deal.
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