Labor board sides with Oakland teachers union on 2022 strike

OAKLAND — The Oakland teachers union, one of the city’s most powerful political forces, has won a significant battle against the Oakland school district after a state labor board found that the union’s 2022 labor strike was legal.

Members of the Oakland Education Association went on strike in April of that year after the Oakland Unified School District’s board decided to close several campuses to save money. The impasse led both sides to file claims of unfair labor practices with the Public Employment Relations Board.

In a finding last week, the labor board determined that the district’s decision to close schools went against its obligations to first bargain with the union — validating the ensuing strike.

The board’s finding bolstered resolve in the teachers union, which in recent years has pursued strong political objectives and tested the legal bounds for what can justify a labor strike besides salary negotiations alone.

“Our students, especially students of color, deserve to have strong and equitable schools that are fully supported,” union President Ismael Armendariz said in a statement after the board’s finding was released.

“(Oakland Unified) should have followed the policy to engage with the community, have an opportunity for conversation, and most of all trust educators,” Armendariz added. “We are still reeling from the effects of their actions.”

Oakland Education Association president Ismael Armendariz speaks before Oakland Unified School District teachers, students and parents during a rally outside La Escuelita Elementary School where a school board meeting was supposed to take place on their fifth day on strike in Oakland, Calif., on Wednesday, May 10, 2023. The OUSD board canceled the meeting with the OEA teachers union. (Ray Chavez/Bay Area News Group)
Oakland Education Association president Ismael Armendariz speaks before Oakland Unified School District teachers, students and parents during a rally outside La Escuelita Elementary School where a school board meeting was supposed to take place on their fifth day on strike in Oakland, Calif., on Wednesday, May 10, 2023. (Ray Chavez/Bay Area News Group) 

Separately, the district and the union settled another claim of unfair labor practice over a second faculty strike last May that involved the union’s push for social justice measures — such as reparations for Black students — to be included in its labor contract.

The terms of that settlement are still undisclosed, but the state board’s finding on the 2022 strike is clear that the union was legally justified in declaring a strike amid the district’s widely controversial decision to close some campuses.

“School closures are a great concern to certificated employees as they provide the possibility of greatly disrupting the personal lives and working conditions of those certificated employees working at those schools which will be closed,” the finding states.

The 2022 decision to close several of the district’s small community campuses, which the district said were suffering from low enrollment, sparked widespread backlash in the community and even hunger strikes from two Oakland educators.

The school board underwent an overhaul in the aftermath, with one director resigning and two others deciding not to seek re-election. Early last year, the new board rescinded the remaining planned closures.

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