Teachers ask for more staff

Union also asks for cap on class sizes

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Teachers, parents and union representatives meet Tuesday at Books on First in Dixon for question-and-answer session about the ongoing Dixon teachers contract dispute. Aaron Eddy, vice president of the union, said teachers want to tell the public their side. "So many of the things we're negotiating is for (students)," he said. (Alex T. Paschal/apaschal@saukvalley.com)
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DIXON – Teachers want more staff, according to the latest offer released Tuesday by their union.

The Dixon Education Association is proposing 40 to 48 minutes more planning time for teachers in an effort "to improve student learning" and for the board to address special education needs by adding 11 to 14 teachers and 24 paraprofessionals.

The Dixon School Board has rejected this offer.

The union estimates the cost at $32,000 a year plus benefits per teacher and $11,000 plus benefits per paraprofessional. Superintendent Michael Juenger said an additional teacher would cost the district $55,000 on average.

The union estimates its demands, which include changes to special education, cutting class sizes, tuition reimbursement and salary increases, would cost the district about $2 million a year over the life of a 5-year contract. The board contends the demands would cost about $6.3 million a year.

Teachers have been working without a contract since August.

As required, both sides sent their final offers to the Illinois Education Labor Relations Board; they were posted on its website on Tuesday.

Click here to read Dixon Unit District #170 Final Offer

Click here to read Dixon Education Association, IEA-NEA Final Offer

At least 14 days must pass before the union can call a strike. Five negotiation sessions have been scheduled, including one Feb. 25.

As for its other demands, the union is proposing salaries to increase by 4-percent new money on the previous year's salary schedule. The board is offering no new money on the previous year's salary.

Regardless whether a pay increase is negotiated, some teachers still will receive a 2-percent raise, according to the school's salary schedule. That 2 percent, which will not be negotiated away, is included in the 6-percent increase the board says the union is seeking.

The union estimates these costs at an additional $306,000 in 2012-2013, $318,240 in 2013-14, $330,970 in 2014-15, $344,208 in 2015-16, and $357,977 in 2016-17.

"The soft freeze added no new money on the salary schedule and 31 percent of the teachers received only a one-time $300 or $500 payment," the union proposal said.

The union also asked for class sizes to be capped at 20 students for prekindergarten through first grades, 22 students for second through fifth grades, 24 students for sixth through eighth grades and 26 students for ninth through 12th grades.

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