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Camarillo teachers accept new labor deal
Accord brings pay in line with other districts
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Camarillo teachers accepted a new labor agreement this week, ending a six-month impasse with the Pleasant Valley School District.
The two sides started working on a 2007-08 contract in September. By the end of the year, however, negotiations had stalled and a state mediator was brought in.
A tentative agreement was reached this month, and according to the deal, teachers will get raises from 1 to 3 percent, depending on how long they have worked in the district, as well as a $1,000 increase to their health benefits.
Union President Suzann Zeigler said it isn't everything that teachers wanted, but it was more than the district had offered previously. The deal was approved by an overwhelming majority of district teachers. On Thursday, Pleasant Valley trustees also signed off on it, voting unanimously without any discussion.
Instead of giving all teachers the same raise, more of the money was applied to those who have been with the district longer. That was done to bring all salaries more in line with those in other Ventura County districts, officials said.
While a beginning teacher's salary in Pleasant Valley, about $44,000, is comparable with other districts, salaries were less competitive for more experienced teachers. The top of the pay scale in Pleasant Valley was about $70,000 annually before the raise.
The board approved a similar plan for other Pleasant Valley employees earlier this month.
The contracts' raises and improved health benefits will cost the district about $1.5 million, said Assistant Superintendent Linda Bekeny.
The salary increase will be retroactive to midyear, which for most employees was Feb. 1. The health benefit increase, which brings the district's contribution from $6,500 to $7,500, will begin in the 2008-09 school year.
This year marked the first time that teacher negotiations had reached an impasse in nearly a decade.
Both sides sat down with a state mediator in early June but failed to come to agreement. Later, however, district and union officials decided to sit down again, this time without a mediator or attorneys. They met June 13, the day after school let out for the summer, and four hours later, they had reached a deal.
Employees are expected to get retroactive pay checks in July.




Posted by JohnAlamillo on June 28, 2008 at 8:07 a.m. (Suggest removal)
Was that an 11% raise the two assistant supts got on thurs.? 8% for last year and 3% for this year. Seems fair...
Posted by koolwhazzup on June 30, 2008 at 7:35 p.m. (Suggest removal)
How insulting-
A retired teacher gets a 2% raise every year-
What a terrible union negotiator these teachers have!!
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