Greater than 5,200 members of the United Educators of San Francisco voted overwhelmingly to authorize the union’s management to name a strike as academics push for extra public schooling funding.
The union, which represents San Francisco Unified Faculty District employees comparable to educators, nurses, counselors, and psychologists, voted in favor by 97.6% to pave the best way for a possible strike.
“Our neighborhood is standing with us in our struggle for the constant classroom academics, particular schooling helps, and secure applications our college students and households want and deserve,” UESF wrote in a Fb publish on Saturday.
The publish stated the college district was putting cash into financial savings accounts and contracting out work to touring psychologists or non-district particular schooling assist workers.
The final time San Francisco educators went on strike was in 1979, based on the union. The strike lasted for seven weeks.
The union didn’t instantly reply to a request for touch upon Sunday through e-mail.
In a publish on Sunday, the San Francisco Unified Faculty District’s Superintendent Maria Su stated they “stay dedicated to negotiating in good religion with UESF and dealing towards an settlement that helps our college students, educators, and faculty communities.”
A particular Board of Schooling assembly is scheduled for Wednesday that can give attention to labor negotiations, which features a decision that will permit the superintendent to make “vital operational selections within the occasion of a strike,” the publish stated.
The strike authorization vote got here on the identical day as educators in Southern California additionally signaled they had been gearing as much as head to the picket traces to demand higher pay and dealing circumstances.
United Lecturers Los Angeles members additionally gave their management authorization to name a strike. One other union — Native 99 of Service Workers Worldwide Union — that represents educators in Southern California can be scheduled to vote on whether or not to authorize a strike beginning on Monday.

