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DESCRIPTION:1/18 Oakland Teachers “Day without Educators”  One Day Work Action  To 
 Protest Attack On Public Education\n\nEducators and community members from 
 schools all over Oakland will rally at Oakland Technical High School from 
 8:00 am until 9:00 am. At 9:00 am, educators will march down Broadway 
 towards the OUSD office at 1000 Broadway and converge there until 
 approximately 1:00pm.\n\nA Day Without Educators Within OUSD\nOakland Tech 
 Teachers Join In With Teachers from Fremont, Madison Park, Skyline, United 
 for Success, Life Academy, Oakland Tech, Oakland High, Roots Middle, 
 Rudsdale Newcomer, and West Oakland Middle School in 2nd Work 
 Action\n\n\nCONTACTS\nOaklandTechEducators@gmail.com\nHeath Madom (917) 
 755-2235\nAlicia Arnold \nJah-Yee Woo\nKatie Bailey\nElizabeth 
 Haugen\n\nOAKLAND, Calif. - Jan 16, 2019 -- On Friday January 18th, 2019, 
 teachers and support staff from Oakland Technical High School will join 
 together with educators from across Oakland Unified School District (OUSD) 
 in a one-day work action. This work action will significantly impact the 
 school day, and we expect that a large majority of educators at Oakland 
 Tech will participate. Educators and community members from schools all 
 over Oakland will rally at Oakland Technical High School from 8:00 am until 
 9:00 am. At 9:00 am, educators will march down Broadway towards the OUSD 
 office at 1000 Broadway and converge there until approximately 
 1:00pm.\n\nThis “Day without Educators” will give a small preview of 
 what an actual, open-ended strike would feel like.  We are doing this to 
 demonstrate to OUSD that we are ready to strike for smaller class sizes and 
 a competitive wage that will allow us to keep working with our families and 
 students in the city that we love. OUSD has systematically underinvested in 
 students and classrooms for years, and we are no longer willing to accept 
 that reality. We demand that OUSD prioritize investing in students and 
 classrooms to ensure that teachers can stay in Oakland and that our 
 students get the support they need to succeed. \n\n“Public schools are 
 the fertile ground for our city and our country’s future growth, and it 
 is dangerously short-sighted to underfund them. I have taught in the Health 
 Academy at Oakland Tech for 10 years, and now when I take my children to 
 their appointments, I find former students taking their vitals and giving 
 them care. Our society will get out of our schools what we put into them. 
 In an increasingly complex age, the only way to ensure our children and our 
 country’s health and well being is to invest in students, teachers, and 
 classrooms,” said Katie Bailey, an English and U.S. Government teacher at 
 Oakland Tech.\n\nFor nearly 2 years, the Oakland Education Association has 
 been negotiating with the Oakland Unified School District to secure more 
 resources for classrooms, including:\n\nA living wage to enable experienced 
 teachers to remain teaching in Oakland\nSmaller class sizes so students can 
 receive the individualized support they deserve\nCommitment to sufficient 
 student support staff in every school, such as nurses, counselors, 
 librarians, psychologists, speech pathologists and resource 
 specialists\n\n“Schools are not factories, and in order for teachers to 
 be able to provide students with the individualized support they need to 
 grow and thrive, and to build relationships based on trust, smaller class 
 sizes are necessary,” said Jah-Yee Woo, an English and U.S. History 
 teacher at Oakland Tech. Many teachers at Tech have class sizes above the 
 contractual limit of 32, with some reporting class sizes as high as 37 and 
 38 students.\n\nAlthough the district had a 30 million dollar surplus last 
 year, it claims it cannot afford to make these improvements and invest in 
 the success of OUSD students. Moreover, the district is threatening to shut 
 down as many as 24 schools in the Flatlands without adequate community 
 input and engagement. \n\nWe are not willing to wait any longer. There are 
 no schools without quality educators. And there are no quality schools 
 without community involvement and adequate resources. We invite members of 
 the press and the community to join us on Friday, January 18th for our work 
 action. Oakland teachers demand better for our students, and our students 
 deserve it.\n\nCharter Controlled Bosses  OUSD Threaten OEA Teachers With 
 Discipline For Sick Out On Jan 18, 2019\n\nJanuary 15, 2019\n\n\n\nDear 
 Certificated Staff, \n\nYour site has been identified as one of the schools 
 1) with teachers who participated in an illegal sick out on December 10, 
 2018 or 2) that plans to participate in the near future. This letter is to 
 provide you with accurate information about illegal sick outs, “wildcat 
 strikes” and inform you of the ramifications of participating in this 
 illegal action. The District is committed to our continued work with our 
 teachers union to resolve our contract.  We remain committed to working 
 together to better support our valued teachers.  However, as your employer 
 it is our responsibility to inform you of the ramifications of 
 participating in sick-outs, “wildcat strikes” and to provide you with 
 accurate information.\n\nYour site has been identified as one of the 
 schools 1) with teachers who participated in an illegal sick out on 
 December 10, 2018 or 2) that plan to participate in the near future.   The 
 District is committed to our continued work with our teachers union to 
 resolve our contract.  We remain committed to working together to better 
 support our valued teachers.  However, as your employer it is our 
 responsibility to inform you of the ramifications of participating in 
 sick-outs, “wildcat strikes” and to provide you with accurate 
 information. \n\n\nSick Outs, Strikes and Other Concerted Activities are 
 Illegal, as OUSD and OEA are Currently in the Fact-finding Stage of 
 Negotiations. \n\nAs most of you are aware, OUSD and OEA are at an impasse 
 in contract negotiations and currently engaged in the fact-finding process 
 facilitated by the Public Employee Relations Board (“PERB’). During 
 this process, concerted activities, such as sick-outs, walk-outs or strikes 
 are illegal. Sick outs and “wildcat strikes” are illegal because, OEA 
 and OUSD are required by law to make a final, good faith, attempt to 
 resolve outstanding issues on the table with the assistance of a three 
 person panel (one OEA appointee, one OUSD appointee, and one neutral 
 appointee to serve as chair). For more information, please see the FAQ on 
 Sick Outs, Concerted Activities and Strikes. Again, any sickouts, walk-outs 
 or strikes conducted during this time are illegal and employees are subject 
 to consequences for participation. \n\nOEA, the Exclusive Union 
 Representative for Teachers, Has Not Sanctioned Any Sick-Outs, Strikes or 
 Other Illegal Concerted Activities. \n\nIt is important to note that OEA, 
 has not endorsed or sanctioned any sick outs or strikes to date. This is, 
 at least in part, because OEA can be subject to an Unfair Labor Practice 
 charge for leading these illegal actions. If you receive incorrect 
 information suggesting that OEA is leading a sick out, please contact the 
 OEA office or the District’s Labor Relations office immediately. For more 
 information on allowable organized efforts that will not put you at risk of 
 violating the law, please contact your OEA President, Vice President or CTA 
 staff. \n\nTeachers Who Participate in Illegal Sick-Outs Will Be Subject to 
 Discipline and Will Not Be Paid For Time Out. \nTeachers participating in 
 sick-outs will be subject to disciplinary action and will lose pay for time 
 missed as these coordinated actions present significant safety and 
 instructional problems for our students. Please be advised, teachers who 
 participated in the December 10, 2018 sick out and/or teachers who 
 participate in any future planned illegal, non-union sickouts, walk outs or 
 strikes will face disciplinary consequences and loss of pay. \nOakland 
 Unified has dedicated, competent and highly professional teachers. Based on 
 the above information, we urge our valued teachers to make the decision for 
 themselves and for our students when deciding whether to participate in 
 illegal activities. Should you have any questions, please feel free to 
 contact our Labor Relations Office at (510) 879-4048. \n\n\nSincerely, 
 \n\n\n\nSondra Aguilera, Chief Academic Officer                             
                              Tara Gard, Deputy Chief 
 Talent\n\n\n\nAttachments area\n\n\n\nOakland teachers prepare wildcat 
 walk-out Friday amid disruptive LA 
 strike\n\nhttps://www.sfchronicle.com/bayarea/article/Oakland-teachers-wildcat-walkout-protest-unions-la-13539231.php?src=hp_totn\n\nLocal 
  // Bay Area & State \n\n\n1of22FILE — Joined by students and supporters, 
 teachers from Oakland High and other schools, gather to protest their wages 
 outside Oakland City Photo: Jana Asenbrennerova / Special to The 
 Chronicle\n\n2of22Joined by students and supporters, teachers from Oakland 
 High and other schools, gather to protest their wages outside Oakland City 
 Hall on Photo: Jana Asenbrennerova / Special to The 
 Chronicle\n\n3of22Joined by students and supporters, teachers from Oakland 
 High and other schools, gather to protest their wages outside Oakland City 
 Hall on Photo: Jana Asenbrennerova / Special to The Chronicle\nTeachers 
 from half a dozen schools in Oakland are planning to walk out Friday to 
 warn the district of a looming strike if they aren’t offered better pay 
 — a move that comes amid a massive teachers’ strike in Los 
 Angeles.\n\nThe walkout is the latest action educators have planned since 
 the Oakland Unified School District offered 5 percent raises over a few 
 years last spring — an offer teachers balked at and countered with a 12 
 percent raise.\n\nWith negotiations at an impasse, the district and the 
 Oakland Education Association teachers union entered the fact-finding phase 
 this month, the final step before a strike vote. The walkout, however, is 
 not sanctioned by the union.\n\n“This is an additional attempt, after 
 several, to try to get OUSD’s school board to come back to the table with 
 a decent offer for teachers,” Oakland High School science teacher Suzi 
 Lebaron said. “There’s a chance we could be taking a strike vote very 
 soon and be striking during the first weeks of February.”\n\nOn Friday at 
 8 a.m., teachers from five Oakland high schools and one middle school will 
 meet in front of Oakland Technical High School and walk to the school 
 district offices at 1000 Broadway in downtown Oakland for a 
 demonstration.\n\nOakland superintendent Kyla Johnson-Trammell agreed that 
 teachers deserve to be paid more, but urged the educators to come to school 
 to support their students on Friday.\n\n“We are committed to working with 
 the OEA to come to an equitable contract that works for both sides,” she 
 said in a statement.\n\nThe school district hasn’t released a plan yet 
 for teacher coverage during the walkout.\n\nSeveral districts across the 
 country have seen teachers go on strike in the past year, most recently in 
 Los Angeles, where thousands of teachers, striking since Monday, are 
 demanding pay raises, smaller class sizes and more support staff.\n\n“You 
 would think they would look at the national news and see that most of these 
 situations have been resolved in favor of teachers,” Lebaron said. “You 
 would think, ‘Why would we even put our city through the trauma, expense 
 and public scrutiny?’ Why not come back to the table and come up with 
 something we can all agree on?”\n\nOakland teachers have been working 
 under an expired contract since July 2017. After the fact-finding phase, 
 the district will make a “final and best” offer, after which teachers 
 will decide to accept or take a strike vote.\n\nBecause the walkout is not 
 sanctioned by the Oakland Education Association, the school district could 
 discipline teachers who participate by docking their pay.\n\nIn December, 
 more than 100 teachers, mainly from Oakland High School, walked out to 
 stage a protest at Oakland City Hall. That unsanctioned action did earn 
 teachers a docked paycheck, Lebaron said.\n\n“Our superintendent is 
 misguided in that she thinks that’s a deterrent when all it really did 
 was really piss people off and make them more determined,” Lebaron 
 said.\n\n https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2019/01/17/18820436.php
SUMMARY:Oakland Teachers “Day without Educators” 1 Day Work Action To Protest Attack On Pub Ed
LOCATION:Educators and community members from schools all over Oakland will rally at 
 Oakland Technical High School 2101 35th Ave. from 8:00 am until 9:00 am. At 
 9:00 am, educators will march down Broadway towards the OUSD office at 1000 
 Broadway and converge there until approximately 1:00pm.\n
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2019/01/17/18820436.php
DTSTART:20190118T160000Z
DTEND:20190118T190000Z
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