Huntington Beach : Teachers, Others Reject 2 Labor Contract Offers
- Share via
Teachers and other white-collar employees of Huntington Beach Union High School District have rejected, by wide margins, two contract offers that would have given them 3% salary increases, a spokesman said Monday.
Doug Scott, president of the Huntington Beach District Educators Assn., which represents 584 non-administrative white-collar employees, said 83% of the 525 members who cast ballots voted against the two offers.
Only 16 teachers voted for an offer of a 3% raise retroactive to July 1 with no other contract changes, Scott said. Similarly, 74 union members voted to accept an offer of a 3% salary increase retroactive to July 1, coupled with a 5% raise for the 1985-86 school year, he said.
District officials could not be reached for comment.
Scott said the district’s average annual salary for a teacher with a bachelor’s degree, 30 additional college units and 10 years of experience is $27,901--”lower than the Orange County average.”
The offers were made two weeks ago during a mediation session that was the second since contract negotiations broke down several months ago. District officials called the offers the “last, final and best” they would be making, and a vote was scheduled for last Friday and Monday.
The teachers’ association, meanwhile, opposed both offers, calling them unfair mandates of the school district.
Until the 3% offers were made, the district had offered 1%. The association has been holding out for 5%.
More to Read
Sign up for Essential California
The most important California stories and recommendations in your inbox every morning.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.