Teachers union files grievance
Heidi Desch / Whitefish Pilot | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 12 years, 10 months AGO
The Whitefish Education Association
teachers union has filed a grievance against the Whitefish School
District.
The WEA claims that the school district
wrongfully denied a request for teachers to meet on union business
during the school day. In response, superintendent Kate Orozco
denied the grievance stating that the teachers contract does not
guarantee such meetings.
The WEA took its claim before the
school board at its Jan. 10 meeting. The board voted to take the
grievance under advisement. The board has a minimum of five days
and up to the next board meeting on Jan. 24 to respond.
“We will take the grievance under
advisement and come back with an answer,” boardchair Pat Jarvi
said.
The WEA claims the school district was
in violation of the collective bargaining agreement between the
district and the teachers union when it prohibited union members
from meeting about union business during their preparation times in
November.
In a letter to the board, WEA President
Kelly Haverlandt said Orozco wrongfully denied a request for
teachers to use their preparations periods to meet about union
business.
Haverlandt and the WEA claim that
historically the practice has been to allow the use of preparation
periods to conduct union business, often at the request of
administration.
Haverlandt told the board she has used
preparation time to answer teachers contract questions or mediate a
dispute between teachers. It was not uncommon for her to meet with
former superintendent Jerry House about union and district business
during that time, she noted.
In a letter to Haverlandt, Orozco
outlined the district’s position stating that the contract allows
union business to be conducted as long as it “does not interrupt
teachers in the course of their duties” and that it does not
entitle teachers to conduct union business during preparation
time.
The letter goes on to say that the
contact states that preparation periods “will be used by teachers
for class preparation or for planning.”
Orozco acknowledges there has been a
tradition of conducting union business during preparation periods,
but that the teacher contract does not guarantee that right.
Bill Howell, field representative for
the MEA-MFT state union, told the board that the decision was an
180-degree turn from the historical practice of allowing short
union business to be conducted during preparation time.
“We think, looking at the practice of
the district, this does not interrupt teaching duties,” he
said.
Howell said that it’s practical for
teachers to be able to ask the union president questions during
preparation periods and that the union does not initiate contact
with teachers during that time.
“It’s not right for the school district
to interfere with union business,” he said. “We’ve had a good
relationship with the district and we see this as a possible
chilling (of that relationship).”
Trustee Charlie Abell asked if it was
possible for teachers to meet outside school hours.
“Prep time is important,” Abell said.
“My concern is if we break up that time that is needed for
preparing for class.”
Howell said while business is conducted
before or after school that the preparation time might be the only
time that is convenient and is useful for quick questions.
Trustee Dave Fern pointed out that the
grievance has been filed based on an historical practice.
“If the district had followed its own
agreement 20 years ago, we wouldn’t be here,” he said.
Howell conceded that the contract
language and the past process have differed slightly.
“It’s sort of hard to put the genie
back in the bottle once it’s been let out,” he said.