Will there be a contract this year? UFT’s latest communication suggests not.
On Monday, the 500-member negotiating committee will meet. That highly anticipated event, the culmination of a year of negotiations, will be followed immediately by the final UFT executive board meeting of the 2022-2023 school year. The very next afternoon, the June Delegate Assembly will be held. Big meetings like this are rarely so close together. You’d think the contract was ready for a vote.
But, as the DA invite email shows below, there may not be a contract vote this year after all. This comes as a bit of a surprise. Other unions like DC37 and PBA finished bargaining in February and April, respectively. And UFT leadership was signaling just weeks ago that the City and the DOE wanted the contract done quickly as much as they did. Then, almost immediately, they started to shift that tune.
It’s clear to me that UFT leadership wanted a contract before summer. They wanted to deliver that sub-inflation ‘pattern’ into our hands in time for our much-needed vacations. And in all likelihood, they wanted to encourage a yes vote by leveraging summer vacation against voting UFT members. But, as months went by, it appeared that they had misjudged the City and the DOE. Having signaled all over the place that they would only use ‘soft’ organizing tactics, UFT leadership showed that they had no leverage in negotiations. That summer contract they wanted was going to be harder to close than they thought. .
Then, the City started to play hardball. We were ambushed with a calendar that arbitrarily expanded our work calendar well beyond 180 days. That was big news for teachers, who erupted in outrage all over social media. But the real slight, at least according to early UFT communications, was the DOE’s unconfirmed adoption of the pilot workday. In retaliation, UFT leadership entered us into a nonsensical game of chicken that will now likely stick us with 37.5 minutes of tutoring after school each day, and no Other Professional Work (OPW) or Parent Engagement (PE) time. In other words, after a campaign that emphasized teacher-directed time, the result of contractual negotiations for this September may be that control of our time is gutted more than ever before. A terrible result – and a blow that will be compounded by a Unity-imposed ’10 % health insurance pay-cut’ whose deadline is closing in fast.
There is still time, of course. Maybe UFT leadership will get a last-minute agreement finalized this weekend. But under these circumstances, how good could it be? With such harsh wording in the DA email, isn’t it implicit that there’s no way we’re close to a good deal – one which would come close to meeting UFC’s 5 core demands? I sincerely doubt it.
15 Comments
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Mike D.
Question: Why is there going to be a DA on a Tuesday instead of Wednesday next week? If it looks like there is no contract as the Mulgrew email sates, why have a DA meeting a day early?
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Mike D.
Today might turn out to be the day we find out if we are getting a contract or if it is going to get negotiated over the summer. (Which would more than likely be rushed through without many teachers having time to study it) If it happens over the summer, pretty much the only folks in the DA who will be around to vote for it will be the Unity Crew. Most other members will be too busy enjoying their summer vacation to keep up with UFT politics. Whats the over/under that we get it done this week as opposed to the summer? I am guessing that it’s going to get done over the summer. I say this because there have been absolutely no leaks as to a definite deal getting done today/tomorrow. Also, if we had a deal, I’m sure that Mulgrew would have already blasted an email saying that, “We got the best deal that we could get”. Thoughts???
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Joe
Are you sharing executive board info?
Zeke Plotkin
Please do not take this as an attack, which it isn’t, where do UFC’ core demands come from? Is it a singular caucus, the entire group of caucuses that comprise UFC or the membership through some sort of poll?