Minneapolis Teachers Go On Strike For Better Mental Health Resources For Students, Among Other Things

Minneapolis teachers went on strike today. And while they want better pay and smaller classrooms, a major demand of theirs is better mental health resources for students.

The current caseload per public school counselor is 450 students. Teachers want to reduce it by half to 225 students.

The New York Times reports on today’s strike:

“Teachers in Minneapolis went on strike Tuesday morning, shuttering classrooms for about 30,000 public school students.

For weeks, the teachers’ union and school district officials have been negotiating over salaries, hiring and resources for students’ mental health. The talks in Minneapolis failed to reach a resolution by their Monday evening deadline, with the district saying it could not afford to meet teachers’ demands.

Megan Peterson, a first-grade teacher, demonstrated in southern Minneapolis on Tuesday morning while her son, a first grader, stayed home with her husband.

‘It is not something any of us want to be doing right now,’ she said.

‘But this is important for me as a parent,’ she added. ‘This is important for me as a teacher. And it’s important for me, as a resident of Minneapolis, for me to make sure my kids are taken care of.’

In a statement on Monday evening, the district said it ‘would remain at the mediation table nonstop in an effort to reduce the length and impact of this strike.’

In St. Paul, the schools were open on Tuesday. A teachers’ strike was averted after the union there, the Saint Paul Federation of Educators, reached a tentative agreement with Saint Paul Public Schools on Monday night.

‘I believe we have arrived at fair and equitable agreements that respect our collective desire to do right by our students,’ the superintendent of Saint Paul Public Schools, Joe Gothard, said in a statement, ‘while working within the district’s budget and enrollment limitations.’

Students in the Twin Cities have already faced pandemic-related disruptions this year. In January, students in Minneapolis learned remotely for two weeks because of staff shortages related to the coronavirus. In St. Paul, some schools also returned to virtual learning for days at a time.”

For the rest of the story, visit The New York Times here.

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