The Phoenixville School Board voted 7-1 Monday night to approve an early bird contract with the teachers union that will provide raises of 2.5 percent in each of the pact's three years.
School Board member Ayisha Sereni cast the only vote against the contract, but offered no public explanation for her vote.
According to the explanation provided by Sylvia Rockwood, the district's human resources director, the contract, which was ratified by the union membership earlier in the day, will go into effect on July 1, 2021, the day the current contract expires.
Teachers who earn graduate degree credits toward a masters degree or beyond can see their salaries increased according to the terms of the contract once each calendar year in January in the first two years of the contract, and in September in the final year, 2023.
Also, teachers on the top salary step on the first pay period of the first two years of the contract will receive a one-time $400 bonus.Several teacher benefits were eliminated, including a provision from the current contract that reduces a $10,000 bonus for opting out of the district's health care insurance plan to $4,000.
Also being phased out in the new contract is an existing provision for a $2,000 bonus for a teacher when their spouse opts out of the health insurance plan. Teachers will continue to make a 7 percent contribution towards their health care premium.
Also being eliminated is a health savings account payment for employees, although first-year employees can have the district match up to $250 of their contributions to such an account.
“I want to take this opportunity to thank all of those involved in working to negotiate this contract,” said School Board Vice President Jeesely Soto, who was the board's lead negotiator.
The board unanimously approved that pact just a year ago, in November, 2019, after teachers had worked five months without a contract and had been in negotiations with the district for a year.
The 2019 vote came after the board had rejected a 48-page fact-finders report issues a month earlier. At the time, both sides expressed disappointment that the contract reached in 2019 was not longer.
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