By TIM HADDOCK
Negotiators for El Camino Real Charter High School teachers and the school’s board of directors resumed contract negotiations on Friday, Feb. 14 as the sides look to pound out a new labor agreement, and an additional round of talks was scheduled for Saturday.
Teachers at the Woodland Hills school have been on strike for five days. According United Teachers Los Angeles, the union and school have been in negotiations for eight months without resolution on a new contract.
UTLA officials on Wednesday filed an unfair practice charge against school management, alleging violations of the Educational Employment Relations Act and failing to bargain in good faith. But school officials told the Los Angeles Daily News the charges are meritless.
It was unclear if any progress toward a deal may have been reached during Friday’s talks. The two sides will meet again at 8 a.m. Saturday.
“A strong contract isn’t just for educators; it’s a commitment to students and their futures,” UTLA chapter chair Carlos Monroy said. “The administration and board promised to prioritize their success, yet after months of inaction, they’ve failed to follow through. Instead of investing in the educators who make learning possible, they’ve let our community down and pushed our school to the brink.”
Teachers went on strike at 8 a.m. Monday. According to a UTLA representative, teachers have been working without a contract since July, and two mediation sessions have failed to produce a new deal.
“If my colleagues and I want to have a sustainable future in education, we have no choice but to fight for the contract we deserve, regardless of the threats made against our positions at El Camino,” science teacher Daniel Zatarain, vice chair of the UTLA ECR bargaining team, said in a statement. “We show up every day to ensure our students get the education they need. It’s disgraceful that ECR’s administration is driving contract negotiations to a breaking point, instead of valuing the educators who make this school run.”
The teachers are demanding a contract with wage increases that reflect the rising cost of living and are planning to strike until they can come to a deal with the charter school’s board of directors.
On Monday, the school released a statement announcing what it called an unprecedented 15% salary increase for the 2024-25 academic year, “reaffirming our commitment to recognizing and rewarding the dedication of our exceptional educators.”
“This salary adjustment, among the highest in California and potentially the nation, reflects our unwavering support for our teachers and their invaluable contributions to student success,” the school’s statement said.
The school added, “With this substantial 15% salary increase, credentialed teachers at El Camino Real Charter High School will now earn between $73,067 and $126,965 annually. These figures surpass the salaries offered by Los Angeles Unified School District (LAUSD) and neighboring charter schools, including Birmingham Community Charter High School, Palisades Charter High School, and Ivy Academia.
In addition to competitive salaries, El Camino Real continues to offer comprehensive health benefits covering employees and their entire families at no cost, along with full benefits for retirees and their spouses/domestic partners’ ‘Lifetime Benefits,’ a benefit many other institutions have scaled back or eliminated.”
Because of the strike, some classes have had no teachers or substitutes. Some students who attended school this week were marked present for the day and some spent the day in the school’s auditorium.
The previous teachers contract expired on July 1, 2024.
Union leaders say the school is not abiding by an agreement between the school and the teachers that has been in place since 2011, guaranteeing that teachers disconnect from the Los Angeles Unified School District in exchange for salaries 6% above the district pay.
It was revealed at a board of directors meeting in December that school administrators received a 15% salary increase retroactive to July 1, 2024. That was followed by a vote of 5-1 in January to cut 44 credentialed positions, including five counselors, five English teachers, one school psychologist and nine SPED teacher, according to the union.
The cuts were made because of declining enrollment, according to the board of directors for the school. Enrollment dropped to 2,937 students in 2024-25, down from 3,171 in the 2023-24 school year.