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2022 Negotiations FAQ
Just the FAQs

ACHIEVING SHARED GOALS IN SERVICE OF OUR STUDENTS Final agreement reached by SCUSD and SCTA, April 3, 2022 . Åž . 100% PAY INCREASE ONE TIME BONUSES MORE PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT INCREASED PAY FOR SUBSTITUTE TEACHERS PAID COVERAGE 4% Ongoing Salary Increase starting in 2021-2022 3% One-time Stipend for 2019-2020 3% One-time Stipend for 2020-2021 One-time payment of $1,250 for 2021-2022 Three additional professional development days will be added to the 2022-2023 school year Increase substitute teacher daily rate by 25% for substitutes who filled in for absent teachers during the 2021-22 school year Additional 14 days COVID sick leave 100% paid health coverage continues for all employees and their family through Kaiser and mutually agreed upon alternative (currently Health Net) The district and SCTA will research options to increase benefit plan choices for employees, and will agree on additional plan(s) that offer equivalent level of value as HealthNet plan by August 31, 2022 If savings from health plan changes are achieved, the savings will fund additional positions that support the district's MTSS framework for providing equitable learning for all students OTHER: SCTA withdraws grievance and pending unfair practice charges Â鶹ÊÓƵ City UNIFIED SCHOOL DISTRICT

Answers to frequently asked questions about the current labor negotiations between the Â鶹ÊÓƵ City Unified School District (SCUSD) and the Â鶹ÊÓƵ City Teachers Association (SCTA). 

Here are some verifiable facts:

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Documents from March 27 2022 – Present

SCUSD Counterproposal Sub Pay and Extra Work March 27 2022

Signed MOU on Training Specialists March 27 2022

SCUSD counterproposal on independent study March 27 2022

SCUSD counterproposal on independent study March 27 2022

SCUSD Counterproposal Sub Pay and Extra Work March 27 2022

Signed MOU on Training Specialists March 27 2022

Signed MOU Nurses Extra Hours 21-22 School Year March 27 2022

SCUSD Enhanced Successor Contract Proposal March 27 2022

SCUSD Reopening Schools to In-Person Instruction Independent Study March 27 2022

SCTA Counterproposal, 03-27-22

SCTA Counterproposal on Substitute Pay and Extra Work 03-27-22

SCTA Counterproposal on Reopening and Independent Study 03-27-22

Revised 10 30 pm SCTA Proposal on COVID Health and Safety Protocols 3-27-22

Revised 10 30 pm SCTA counter on Subs Combined Classes 3-27-22

Revised 10 30 pm SCTA Proposal Overview to SCUSD 3-27-22

Â鶹ÊÓƵ City Unified School District Proposal to the Â鶹ÊÓƵ City Teachers Association 2019-2022 Successor Contract Negot

Â鶹ÊÓƵ City Unified School District Proposed MOU Between SCUSD and SCTA Substitute Pay & Extra Work 2021-2022 School Year

SCUSD Proposal to SCTA 2019-2022 Successor Contract Negotiations March 30, 2022 Enhanced District Proposal

Proposed MOU Between SCUSD and SCTA Safely Reopening Schools to In-Person Instruction Services & Independent Study March 30 2022

SCTA Proposal to SCUSD March 30, 2022

Revised SCTA Proposal to SCUSD March 30 2022

Revised 3-31-22 SCTA Overview Proposal

3 29 22 SCUSD Counter Proposal to SEIU v1 package

3 30 22 SCUSD Counter Proposal to SEIU v2 package

3 30 22 SCUSD Counter Proposal to SEIU v3package

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2022 Negotiations Updates

Sunday, April 3, 2022

MOU Between SCUSD and SEIU April 3 2022

MOU Between SCUSD and SCTA – Substitute Pay & Extra Work 2021-2022 School Year – April 3, 2022

MOU Between SCUSD and SCTA 2019-2022 Successor Contract and COVID Reopening Schools Negotiations April 3 2022

MOU Between SCUSD and SCTA – Safely Reopening Schools to In-Person Instruction Services & Independent Study – April 3 2022

MOU Between SCUSD and SCTA Nurse Extra Hours 2021 2022 School Year

MOU Between SCUSD and SCTA Temporarily Assigning Training Specialists to Fill Vacant Teaching Positions in the District 3-22-22

Tuesday, March 22, 2022

Enhanced Â鶹ÊÓƵ City Unified School District Proposal to the Â鶹ÊÓƵ City Teachers Association 2019-2022 Successor Contract Negotiations and 2021-2022 COVID and Reopening Negotiations

Monday, March 21, 2022

Â鶹ÊÓƵ City Unified School District Proposal to the Â鶹ÊÓƵ City Teachers Association 2019-2022 Successor Contract Negotiations and 2021-2022 COVID and Reopening Negotiations

Thursday, March 17, 2022

Report and Recommendation of Fact Finding Panel – PERB Case No SA-IM-3546-E – Dissent

Thursday, March 17, 2022

Friday, March 11, 2022

SCUSD Supplemental Information for Fact Finding

Thursday, March 10, 2022

Letter to SCTA Regarding Accurate Communications on Fact Finding

Wednesday, March 9, 2022

Please see this letter which was sent to all SCUSD staff this evening:

 

Dear colleagues,

I have heard questions and concerns from many of our school sites about Â鶹ÊÓƵ City Teachers Association’s (SCTA) current efforts to vote for a strike. I know that hearing about a potential strike and potential disruption to student learning can be extremely unsettling. In response I am sharing the following information.

In recognition that teaching and learning during a pandemic has presented extra challenges, Sac City Unified has tried since last July to problem solve and reach an agreement with SCTA to address COVID-related challenges for the 2021-22 school year. Our goal was to ensure that schools could reopen safely and the district could provide the best education possible under the constraints of the pandemic.

The problem-solving proposals that we presented as early as August 2021 included:

  • Providing who volunteered to take on additional students in independent study;
  • Providing and our existing secondary teachers who substituted during their prep period;
  • Providing who took on COVID-related duties after regular work hours;
  • Supporting students who were required to quarantine by providing simultaneous in-person and remote instruction for students in short-term independent study, with ;
  • Complying with the COVID-19 public health guidance and recommendations for schools, detailed in the district’s ; and 
  • Addressing staffing shortages by temporarily utilizing 28 District Training Specialists to .

After working for months trying to reach agreement with SCTA on these matters, the district sought a declaration of impasse in December 2021 from the Public Employment Relations Board (PERB). Neutral mediators were called in to facilitate talks, but after several sessions the mediators recommended that both parties participate in a Fact Finding process with the goal of resolving outstanding issues so an agreement on the COVID-related issues for this school year could be reached.

In our mpasse filing to PERB, we narrowly defined our disagreements as stemming from COVID and our efforts to reopen our schools and protect continuity of learning. Since we are now nearly at the last quarter of our school year, we are still eager to resolve these outstanding issues in a way that best serves all students.

We are on two separate negotiations tracks. The first is over our school reopening plans related to COVID-19. The second is over the full successor contract to our current agreement that lapsed in July 2019. The district and SCTA have both acknowledged that we are not at impasse over successor contract negotiations. The fact finding process we are in has nothing to do with inaccurate claims about “health benefit takeaways†or “salary freezes†that SCTA union leadership has used to urge SCTA members to strike.

To be clear, the district did not file for impasse due to negotiations about a successor contract.  As such, the district cannot impose changes to health benefits and other matters as a result of the current Fact Finding process because we are not at impasse over those matters. If SCTA union leadership leverages the Fact Finding process to include successor contract issues into the hearing, it will enable SCTA to bypass further legitimate talks on our broader successor agreement and disregard the purpose of the impasse process.

A strike will cause chaos for students and families.

After nearly three school years of interrupted learning due to COVID-related school closures, illness, and quarantines, it is unconscionable that SCTA is threatening a strike to shut down our schools. This is offensive to all of our families that have been waiting for their children’s school experience to get back to normal. Taking away students’ access to learning time and the support services that our schools provide is inappropriate. This is especially hurtful and harmful to our most vulnerable students who count on our schools as safe havens, and families who do not have the luxury of keeping their children unsupervised at home.

Striking employees stand to lose income.

A strike will also hurt our employees because they will lose wages for every day off the job, thus hurting students, families, and employees.

A path forward.

While our district works to avoid an unnecessary and detrimental strike, please be aware that a lot of misleading and false information is being circulated. Please refer to SCUSD’s Negotiations Updates web page for accurate information, including proposals and counterproposals related to COVID-19 and updates about negotiations. I encourage you to demand and review credible sourced information.

The district remains committed to working through the current impasse process to reach agreement on COVID-related issues for the 2021-22 school year. We are also committed to continuing successor contract negotiations with SCTA and hope to reach an agreement that is in the best interest of our students, staff, and community. 

Sincerely,

Superintendent Jorge Aguilar

Friday, March 4, 2022

Scope of Issues for Fact-Finding

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Documents from July 1, 2018 – March 26, 2022