Teachers set 2nd City Hall picketing for today

By Tessa Roy
Posted 5/4/17

By TESSA ROY The Warwick Teachers Union (WTU) announced yesterday it plans to hold another informational picketing today at City Hall to alert the public to the Warwick School Committee's continued negligence in reaching a successor collective"

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Teachers set 2nd City Hall picketing for today

Posted

The Warwick Teachers Union (WTU) announced yesterday it plans to hold another informational picketing today at City Hall to “alert the public to the Warwick School Committee’s continued negligence in reaching a successor collective bargaining agreement (CBA) with the WTU and to let the Warwick taxpayers know that the Warwick School Committee (WSC) have allowed Superintendent Philip Thornton to waste roughly a half a million dollars in payments to a law firm for mediation, interest arbitration, frivolous court actions, and other legal expenses.”

The union conducted “informational picketing” last month at City Hall that was reported to have drawn about 300 people, but Union President Darlene Netcoh said there were more like 600 to 700 who stopped by in the two hours they were there.

Mayor Scott Avedisian said he didn’t want to comment ahead of today’s planned picketing in case it didn’t end up happening. However, he said Netcoh told him they would not be targeting him but were going to picket City Hall because doing so would get more media coverage.

Netcoh said she doesn’t recall commenting on media coverage but agreed City Hall provides more attention when it comes to “alerting the community” and that people don’t always notice when they picket at the administration building. She said in a phone call Wednesday that the WTU is not, in fact, targeting the mayor and instead is taking aim at the School Committee and Superintendent Philip Thornton. The reason she gave for choosing City Hall is “this is an issue that affects the entire city.”

“We are awaiting the interest arbitrator’s award; the union has offered now twice to make this award binding, and that way we will have contract language and a successor agreement,” Netcoh said of the current negotiation status. She added that Avedisian has set a mediation date of May 23. Avedisian confirmed the date, saying it wasn’t one he chose but was the most convenient time for everyone from the school, union, the mediator and himself to meet.

School Committee Vice Chair Eugene Nadeau said Wednesday that the School Committee would meet with the union on Saturday and that the “over 100 hours” of meetings they have already had haven’t been successful. 

Thornton said the School Committee “continues to negotiate in good faith with the union leadership” and looks forward to “coming to an agreement on a new contract with the union leadership so that the school committee, educational leaders and the teachers can move forward as a district.”

In regards to what the union’s release called “frivolous court action,” Thornton said the School Committee is “disappointed” that any court action has been necessary.

“The School Committee would have preferred to have resolved these issues without court intervention. However, the School Committee is compelled to negotiate on behalf of the citizens and taxpayers of Warwick,” he said. Thornton noted that “to this point, the School Committee and leadership has received favorable rulings in a vast majority of the RIDE and Superior Court actions that have been filed. Court and RIDE actions related to electronic grading, the job fair, layoffs, ULP 6176A and requirements to arbitrate have all resulted in legal victories for the School Committee and the citizens of Warwick.” 

The School Committee has indeed made gains in the courts; Superior Court Justice Bennett Gallo struck down a State Labor Relations Board finding that the committee committed an unfair labor practice when it refused to abide by the terms of the expired contract. The union argued terms of the former contract remained in place until a new agreement was reached when the committee laid off more than the 20-teacher limit in response to the consolidation of secondary schools. The Superior Court later denied the union’s request for a stay of Gallo’s order.

In a press release sent out Wednesday morning, the union wrote that although it first attempted to begin negotiations in December 2014 to allow for enough time to reach an agreement before the August 31, 2015 expiration of the collective bargaining agreement, the School Committee did not begin negotiations until the summer of 2015 and requested mediation that fall.

“In November 2015, in the middle of mediation, Superintendent Thornton and the Warwick School Committee [WSC] filed for interest arbitration allegedly to seek a resolution to the contract dispute. To ensure that this method would indeed result in a successor collective bargaining agreement, the Warwick Teachers’ Union, in December 2015, proposed that the sides agree to make the neutral interest arbitrator’s decision binding,” Union President Darlene Netcoh stated in the release. “However, the WSC refused this offer and have yet to respond to the WTU’s recently reiterated proposal. Every taxpayer in Warwick should wonder why the WSC would reject the neutral arbitrator’s decision, after they and the superintendent are the ones who chose this route and have spent a year and a half and close to a quarter of a million dollars."

Today’s picketing is planned for 2:30 to 4:30 p.m. at City Hall. Captain Joseph Hopkins of the Warwick Police Department said the WPD would put into effect the same presence as it did at last month’s picketing.

Comments

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  • Justanidiot

    eyes hope sum anglish teachers hep them spill out da words on der signs

    Thursday, May 4, 2017 Report this

  • richardcorrente

    Dear Warwick Teachers Union,

    I am sorry that I am unable to attend the picket this afternoon. Please believe I am there in spirit.

    Dear Gene Nadeau,

    I have had many warm discussions with you over the past few years and I believe we both walked away with value from those talks and even some agreement. In the above article you stated that you have invested "over 100 hours of meetings" and they haven't been successful. Well, Gene, if it even takes 500 hours then it does! Too bad! Your job is to meet with the WTU. If I was part of the discussions and it took 500 hours we all would have had new contracts two years ago because I would have spent 50 hours a week for 10 weeks! No one knows how long it will take to reach an agreement, but the longer it does the worse the school reputation becomes, so spend the time. The WTU is willing. Do it today. Tomorrow too. And if you want a proxy, I will be happy to sit in for you, because the solution (whatever it is) is way, way overdue.

    Happy Summer everyone

    Rick Corrente

    The Taxpayers Mayor

    Thursday, May 4, 2017 Report this

  • PaulHuff

    Stop Pandering Richard. It's getting really old. Please just go away into obscurity.

    And teachers....come to your senses and settle this contract. You might have to give up some of your perks. ANd remember that it was you who took raises in 2012-2015 when everyone else in the city engaged in give backs.

    Thursday, May 4, 2017 Report this

  • ThatGuyInRI

    What exactly is the proposal WTU put forth? Need the details.

    Word on the street is they rejected annual raises of 3%, 3%, 3% - which are unheard of raises in RI education today - putting top step teachers over 90K/yr. What are they proposing?

    Friday, May 5, 2017 Report this

  • ThatGuyInRI

    At least we got a heads up this time, thanks for that.

    Don't go anywhere near Apponoag, it was a mess last month, traffic from hell.

    Friday, May 5, 2017 Report this