Fillmore Unified Teachers Association Declare Impasse in Negotiations with the District
April 5th FUSD Board Meeting. Photo courtesy FUTA president Jennifer Beal.
April 5th FUSD Board Meeting. Photo courtesy FUTA president Jennifer Beal.
FUTA Continues to Make Maintaining and Attracting High Quality Educators a Priority

This article was submitted By FUTA president Jennifer Beal

Fillmore – More than 60 educators upset over the Fillmore Unified School District’s lack of a making a competitive salary offer in negotiations attended the school board meeting on April 5th. The next day the District still refused to increase its salary offer during negotiations by handing over the same proposal from the previous meeting. The FUTA bargaining team felt it had no choice but to declare impasse, which is when both bargaining teams tried to find common ground but are at a deadlock and unable to break it. Fillmore is the last district in Ventura County to settle on a salary agreement for this 15-16 school year. And it was very apparent the District was not going to offer anything higher than their previous offers.

After the passage of Proposition 30 in 2012, school districts started getting some financial relief and began to see increases in money from the state. Fillmore Unified School District has received more than $13.7 million in the last 3 years. Fillmore educators took cuts in pay during the recession years. They lost 20 days of pay (among the highest amount of furlough days in the County’s school districts) to help keep the district from going in the red. While the educators were taking pay cuts, the District’s reserves grew! The state was allowing districts to go below the legally mandated 3% but Fillmore’s reserve was always way above that. In 2010-11 it was 8.11% (5 furlough days), in 2011-12 it was 11.69% (10 furlough days), in 2012-13 it was 10.32% (5 furlough days), in 2013-14 it was 7.14%, and in 2014-15 it was 11.60%, This year it is projected to be 6.97%, 3.97% above what is legally required.

With the growing teacher shortage Fillmore could be the first to face the hardship of not being able to hire highly qualified teachers because of the lack of a competitive salary. When compared to 14 other districts, 13 in Ventura County and Las Virgenes in LA County Fillmore is ranked 13th for the average teacher’s salary with a Master’s degree, only one other district is lower! Again, it is ranked 13th out of 14 when it comes to projecting the teacher’s monthly retirement income at age 60 with 25 years of teaching. It comes up a notch for projecting the retirement at age 62 with 32 years of teaching experience to 12th out of 14. The total amount spent on teachers’ salaries taken from the district’s total expenses has decreased percentage wise over the last 5 years. In official documents from 2012-13 it was ranked 13th again out of the 14 school districts. Yet the District has no problem increasing administrative positions and salaries.

The FUTA is affiliated with the 340,000-member California Teachers Association and with the 3.2
million-member National Education Association.

The FUSD administrator percentage of the District’s budget expenses increased and was ranked 1st out of the 14 school districts.

Without the true willingness of the district to work with teachers for a fair, competitive raise, the Fillmore Unified Teacher’s Association could do nothing else but declare impasse. We wish the district had lived up to its own mission statement of its core values posted on the wall of the Fillmore Unified School District's boardroom, "We hire, support, and retain high-performing staff”.