Oakland

School Reopenings on Track as Oakland Unified School District and Union Seek New Agreement

The district has said it plans reopen in-person instruction to all students by fall

NBC Bay Area

File Image.

An Oakland Unified School District spokesman says additional city schools will offer full in-person instruction on Monday, as planned, as the district and its teachers' union continue discussing impacts of reopening.

The district reached a tentative reopening agreement last month with the union, the Oakland Education association.

"It is clear that we need to offer more in-person instruction for those students and families who want and need it while also continuing to offer robust distance learning opportunities," Superintendent Kyla Johnson-Trammell said then. "This pandemic has stripped away many of the tools that we use to support our students and community."

Union members later ratified the agreement. Now, OUSD spokesman John Sasaki said in a statement late Friday, the union has asked California's Public Employment Relations Board to declare that it has reached an impasse with the district in talks over additional issues related to reopening.

Sasaki said the district and union both asked PERB on Friday to appoint a mediator to resolve the matter.

On April 14 all OEA members were to return to classrooms. And in-person instruction is to resume on April 19 for students in pre-kindergarten through grade 6 -- and "priority students" in higher grades -- whose families had opted in.

The district has said it plans reopen in-person instruction to all students by fall.

Copyright Bay City News
Exit mobile version