Yesterday the superintendent’s office put out a publication, BPS This Week, that put a ‘creative’ spin on two points that deserve to be clarified.
Point #1: State law requires that there must be a new performance evaluation system in place by September and the union has not cooperated in negotiating the terms of that issue because it refuses to separate the issue from the master bargain.
Point #2: The school district would like to settle the contract ‘right away,’ but the union somehow is seeking to elongate the mediation process more than is necessary. Here’s what the superintendent’s office said: “While we are eager, as you are, to settle the contract right away, official BTU publications suggest that the union expects the mediation may take a year or more. We hope it does not.” The union, according to the school district spin, is seeking to prolong the mediation process. Really.
The union’s response: Both the school department and the BTU voluntarily entered into the state-sanctioned mediation process. The process takes time, and no one can predict how long it will take. The school department knows this as well as we do. It could take 2 months; it could take two years. The process has many components to it, and each component takes time. Neither party can manipulate the process by shortening the procedures and protocols. Again, the school department knew this, as did we, when both parties volunteered to partake in the process two months ago. If the superintendent has a secret plan to shorten this process, we would welcome her participation. Now for the more hopeful news.