Teachers in Pueblo D60 have voted to strike following the district’s decision to deny teacher’s pay raises at a recent board meeting.
The results of the vote, which happened Thursday night and was extended into Friday afternoon The final tally showed a 471-24 vote in favor of going on strike.
Unless there is intervention by the Colorado Department of Labor, teachers will strike the week of May 7.
After extending the voting window, Pueblo Education Association today votes to strike 471-24 pic.twitter.com/9jrNlnIgYb
— Andy Koen (@KOAAAndyKoen) April 20, 2018
The decision to strike stems from a school board decision last week to reject recommendations from a third party fact-finder to approve a 2 percent cost-of-living pay increase for teachers.
The teachers and paraprofessionals in the district have worked all year without new contracts. Salaries remained at last year’s levels.
"We’re tired of getting treated without respect," Teacher Julie Cain said in an earlier interview with News 5. "It’s been many years since we’ve had a good increase in living. They say they don’t have the money, but the fact-finder says differently."
Those with Pueblo City Schools told News 5 they do not dispute the fact that teachers deserve to be paid more. Their focus is making fiscally-sound decisions for the district.
Superintendent Charlotte Macaluso explained in an email distributed district-wide that there isn’t enough money in savings to cover the roughly $1.7 million in extra salary that was negotiated. Declining enrollment and emergency building repairs put the district millions of dollars into the red.
"We project that our expenditures will outpace revenues by $3.6 million this year," Macaluso wrote. "As stewards of the taxpayer dollars, we cannot in good faith continue to raid our reserves to pay for salary increases for previous years."
Earlier this year, the board announced plans to convert the school calendar to 4 day weeks. That move is anticipated to save the district around $1.2 million. However, that savings will not be realized until the end of the next school year.
D60 says it has substitutes and other support staff on standby and graduation will not be impacted.