SAN FRANCISCO (KGO) — A teachers’ strike over pay and health care has kept San Francisco Unified School District schools closed for a fourth day Thursday.

Thousands of educators rallied at San Francisco’s Ocean Beach on the third day of the strike, making their message clear with a human banner that read, “Strike for our students.”

Several elementary school teachers told us they felt like they had no other option.

“My students are right behind us actually they tapped me on the shoulder. We are missing a lot. We rather be in the classroom right now, but we are fighting for equality and to be out here and to be able to afford San Francisco,” said Heather Wong, an SFUSD teacher.

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Many parents of students in the San Francisco Unified School District are feeling the strain of the ongoing teachers’ strike.

Earlier on Tuesday, SFUSD’s superintendent Maria Su said her team made a strong offer to the teachers Union Thursday night but the union left the table just after 10 p.m.

She says her team was ready to negotiate overnight, something that did not happen.

“We can’t just keep putting forward proposals and not receive a counter. That’s how this works,” said Maria Su, SFUSD Superintendent.

Su urged the union to act with urgency. She says the district proposed a 10% wage increase over 2 years for staff that support teachers and a 6% wage hike for certificate staff including teachers and social workers.

“Our proposal is more than making SFUSD an attractive place to work its about ensuring educators can afford to live and raise their families in the city. Our offer is generous, and we have figured out a way to make sure that we can pay for it fiscally responsible,” said Superintendent Su.

Leslie Ho, Secretary of the United Educators of San Francisco says her team is desperate to make an agreement.

“We are really excited that there are finally negotiations happening at the table for the last couple of days which we haven’t seen in 11 months, so we are really excited that there is finally some movement,” said Ho.
In limbo, close to 50,000 students are waiting to see what happens next.

“I’ve got AP test coming up and I’m missing a bunch of my AP classes so it’s a little rough and it’s really especially rough for my teachers,” said Mira Clark, an SFUSD Junior.

LUZ PENA: “Before the strike did your teacher explain to you what was possibly going to happen?”

“Yes, they said it may happen on Thursday or Friday. That did not happen. It happens it on Monday and he said he doesn’t want the strike to go on because the teachers that not getting in that time, so I support that opinion because I want teachers to get paid,” said Felix Clark a west portal elementary school student.

SFUSD confirmed they are losing anywhere between $7 – $10 million a day every day schools remain closed.

SF parents scramble as teachers strike leaves thousands out of school

Connor Haught has been juggling virtual work meetings and arts and crafts projects for his two daughters as his family tries to navigate a teachers strike in San Francisco with no end date in sight.

Haught’s job in the construction industry allows him to work from home but, like many parents in the city, he and his wife were scrambling to plan activities for their children amid the uncertainty of a strike that has left nearly 50,000 students out of the classroom.

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“The big concern for parents is really the timeline of it all and trying to prepare for how long this could go on,” Haught said.

The San Francisco Unified School District’s 120 schools remained closed for a third day Wednesday, after about 6,000 public schoolteachers went on strike over higher wages, health benefits, and more resources for students with special needs.

Some parents are taking advantage of after-school programs offering full-day programming during the strike, while others are relying on relatives and each other for help with child care.

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Haught said he and his wife, who works evenings at a restaurant, planned to have their 8- and 9-year-old daughters at home the first week of the strike. They hope to organize play dates and local excursions with other families. They have not yet figured out what they will do if the strike goes on a second week.

“We didn’t try to jump on all the camps and things right away because they can be pricey, and we may be a little more fortunate with our schedule than some of the other people that are being impacted,” Haught said.

The United Educators of San Francisco and the district have been negotiating for nearly a year, with teachers demanding fully funded family health care, salary raises and the filling of vacant positions impacting special education and services.

Teachers on the picket lines said they know the strike is hard on students but that they walked out to offer children stability in the future.

“This is for the betterment of our students. We believe our students deserve to learn safely in schools, and that means having fully staffed schools. That means retaining teachers by offering them competitive wage packages and health care, and it means to fully fund all of the programs we know the students need the most,” said Lily Perales, a history teacher at Mission High School.

Superintendent Maria Su on Wednesday urged both sides to act with urgency, saying the district had a counterproposal ready Tuesday night and were prepared to stay all night, but that union negotiators had left for the day.

“We have been ready to negotiate his entire time. We are prepared and committed to getting this agreement done today,” she said at a morning press conference, calling their latest offer generous.

The two sides, which are scheduled to meet mid-day Wednesday, have yet to agree on a wage increase and family health benefits. The union initially asked for a 9% raise over two years, which they said could help offset the cost of living in San Francisco, one of the most expensive cities in the country. The district, which faces a $100 million deficit and is under state oversight because of a long-standing financial crisis, rejected the idea. Officials countered with a 6% wage increase paid over three years.

On Tuesday, Sonia Sanabria took her 5-year-old daughter and 11-year-old nephew to a church in the Mission District neighborhood that offered free lunch to children out of school.

Sanabria, who works as a cook at a restaurant, said she stayed home from work to take care of the children.

“If the strike continues, I’ll have to ask my job for a leave of absence, but it will affect me because if I don’t work, I don’t earn,” Sanabria said.

She said her elderly mother helps with school drop off and pick up but leaving the children with her all day is not an option. Sanabria said she has given them reading and writing assignments and worked with them on math problems. Sanabria said she is making plans for the children day-by-day and expressed support for the striking teachers.

“They are asking for better wages and better health insurance, and I think they deserve that because they teach our children, they take care of them and are helping them to have a better future,” she said, adding, “I just hope they reach agreement soon.”

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