Camas public school teachers are hitting the picket lines for a second day Tuesday, calling for better class sizes; equitable funding for music, health and library programs; and a cost-of-living salary increase that keeps pace with local inflation rates.
Meanwhile, representatives from the Camas School District and the Camas Education Association (CEA), the union representing around 450 Camas educators, are sitting down to the bargaining table again after failed negotiations Monday night.
CEA vice president Michael Sanchez said the teachers’ union continues to bargain “in good faith” despite what he called “threats” from the district.
“By saying that they have presented their ‘last, best and final offer,’ Superintendent (John) Anzalone made it clear that the district had walked away from the bargaining table,” Sanchez said Tuesday in a recorded message to the community posted on the CEA website (weteachcamas.org). “As of the evening of Aug. 28, the district asserted that they expect CEA to accept their proposal without any further discussion.”
Sanchez said the district had also notified parents that the school board had “approved legal action to end the strike.”