Skip to Content

ESEA Logo

 

ESEA Collective Bargaining Facts:

Our current ESEA contract, ratified in July 2005, provides for a four percent salary increase on July 1, 2006

For health insurance in 2006-2007, CCSD will contribute more than $400 per employee, per month

The contract called for a 2.25 percent salary increase and the implementation of the new reclassification study via the establishment of a new salary schedule on July 1, 2005 - the implementation of that study resulted in significant salary increases for many employees

Read the 2005-2009 ESEA-CCSD Negotiated Agreement here
(You will need the free Adobe® Acrobat® Reader® available here.)

 

ESEA > BENEFITS > COLLECTIVE BARGAINING

 

 

SICK LEAVE POOL

ESEA bargained for and won a Sick Leave Pool for all ESEA support staff employees who become members of the Sick Leave Pool.

If you are sick, and without sufficient leave, ESEA members can apply for days from the Sick Leave Pool to keep you from losing pay.

There are two enrollment periods, April and September.

Support Staff Sick Leave Pool Guidelines
January 26, 2006

  1. CCSD Employee-Management Relations (EMR) shall administer the Sick Leave Pool.  EMR and ESEA shall each have input into the drafting of the enrollment form; however, the Associate Superintendent of Human Resources or the Associate Superintendent’s designee shall make the final decision regarding the adopted form. EMR and ESEA will both distribute the adopted enrollment form; however, only EMR shall collect and process the enrollment forms.  EMR shall retain responsibility to distribute and collect applications for benefits.
  2. 2. Qualifications are outlined in Article 11-5 of the Negotiated Agreement between the Clark County School District and the Education Support Employees Association.
    3. Enrollment periods will be the months of April and September of each year.
    4. Membership in the Sick Leave Pool is for any regular status support staff employee who applies and meets the eligibility requirements as outlined in Article 11-5 of the Negotiated Agreement between the Clark County School District and the Education Support Employees Association.  Enrollees shall:
    a. Complete an enrollment form;
    b. Agree to contribute one accrued sick leave day to the pool; and
    c. Has at least six sick leave days as of the end of the enrollment period
    5. Membership in the Sick Leave Pool shall be continuous from the initial enrollment until and individual has drawn all approved days (not to exceed one hundred [100] days during any one contract year) only for a catastrophic injury or illness of the participant.  Pregnancy in and of itself is not a catastrophic illness.
    6. Sick Leave Pool benefits shall be coordinated with benefits covered by Worker Compensation cases.
    7. Sick Leave Pool benefits may be coordinated with Long-Term Disability payments.
    8. The Committee has the authority to make decisions to grant days from the Pool on a case-by-case basis.
    9. The Committee may consider a participant’s (1) accrued vacation and compensatory time, (2) prior sick leave usage, and (3) any discipline for abuse of sick leave in determining eligibility.  Applicants will be informed of the decision of the Committee by EMR.
    10.  All cases shall be reviewed when the 50th day of benefits is reached.  The Committee will request additional medical certifications.
    11.  For payment purposes the benefits will be paid on the scheduled support staff biweekly pay dates.
    12.  Members drawing Sick Leave Pool Benefits are not eligible for accrual of any leave.
    13.  Application forms may only be obtained by calling CCSD Employee –Management Relations at 799-0210.  Applications will only be provided to current members of the Pool.
    14. New participants are not eligible for days from the Sick Leave Pool until November 1st after the September enrollment and June 1st after the April enrollment.
    15.  Members wishing to terminate membership in the Sick Leave Pool should do so in writing by certified mail to CCSD Employee-Management Relations.  Their membership will be terminated on June 30th of the contract year in which the request was made.
    16.  Days donated to the Sick Leave Pool are non-refundable.
 

photo showing handshake

 

Each year many months of serious discussion and debate go into bargaining with the CCSD to improve members' salaries, benefits, and working conditions. The article below, written by an ESP in Illinois, is a call to members to get involved in those negotiations.

 

CONTRACT NEGOTIATIONS BRING OUT THE DEVIL

A Good Contract is The Most Important Document You Can Have

By Dave Arnold
(Dave Arnold, a member of the Illinois Education Association, is head custodian at Brownstown Elementary School in Southern Illinois.)


A good contract is the most important document an employee can have. This makes it critical for Education Support Professionals to get involved in contract negotiations.


I look at contract negotiations like buying a used car. In both cases you are dealing with the devil. I might be exaggerating some, but neither is a pleasant task. Unfortunately, both are a part of life for many people.

If you get a good deal in contract negotiations, as with a car, it is a benefit. But anything that is a benefit or privilege can be given or taken from you. This was the topic discussed when another Education Support Professional (ESP) and I were asked to facilitate a custodian maintenance roundtable discussion at an ESP conference.

I was sure that my co-presenter and I would have members in our group that had never been on a negotiating team. I wanted an illustration that would describe to them what negotiations would be like. After digging through some graphics, I found the perfect illustration. It was a picture of the devil setting at a desk with the caption, "Let's make a deal."

DEAL US IN

Anytime you sit at a bargaining table, you can be certain that the opposing party will do their best to take advantage of you. Before our local Association in Brownstown was organized, my co-workers and I were totally dependent upon labor laws and the school board's policy.

While labor laws were permanent, we found that board policy was constantly changing with little notice. Even worse, most board members knew little about labor law. Since a contract is the most important document an employee can have, it is vital that ESPs have direct input during contract negotiations.

Since my local is very small, each employee classification has a representative on our negotiating team. I am not comfortable debating issues that involve another employee's classification. Just as I would not want someone who is unfamiliar with my job negotiating language pertaining to my classification.

It's just like voting for a candidate. If you don't participate in the political process then you allow someone else to control your Association, your community, your country. It's important to get involved. I'm sure that in some cases, like larger Associations, it is not possible to have each classification represented by a negotiator at the bargaining table.

LEARN THE ROPES

Still, this is no excuse for ESPs not to be involved in some capacity. A team always needs those players behind the scenes to help with writing proposals, researching issues, and helping with mundane-but-necessary tasks, such as making photocopies.

Being an observer during negotiations is a good opportunity to train as a negotiator. Observers are also excellent at picking up on the attitude and body language of the board's negotiators. This is important, for seldom do entire teams agree with every aspect of a proposal. If one member dislikes one issue, this might force the rejection of the complete proposal.

My sincerest sympathy goes to state Associations that have no bargaining rights. I can't think of a better way of describing the absence of bargaining rights other than to call it a dictatorship. School district dictatorships should be challenged.

CALL CONGRESS

Legislators can help your cause here. They are truly the servants of the public. Many are willing to listen to voters. So, write to them, call them, and lobby until you win your bargaining rights. To me, the absence of the right to bargain contract language is an infringement on our freedom of speech.

The Constitution guarantees the rights of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. I cannot understand how a legislator could possibly believe that a group of employees could pursue happiness without the right to bargain a contract of employment.

(Reprinted from nea.org. The views expressed in this column are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of the NEA or its affiliates.)

 

 

©2006 ESEA
ABOUT USBENEFITSCALENDAR COLLECTIVE BARGAININGCOMMUNICATIONS CONTRACT ENFORCEMENTESEA ADVOCATE ARCHIVES FEEDBACKHOME JOIN LEGAL ASSISTANCEPOLITICAL ACTIONPROTECTING EMPLOYEE RIGHTS RESOURCES SITE MAPWHAT'S NEW