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Teaching Profession

Staff Who Disrupted NEA’s Assembly Will Be Locked Out of Work

By Brooke Schultz — July 07, 2024 | Updated: July 07, 2024 2 min read
The staff organization for the National Education Association strikes on Friday, July 5, outside of the Pennsylvania Convention Center in Philadelphia. The staff organization members will be locked out of work until a new contract is reached.
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Updated: This story has been updated with reaction from the National Education Association Staff Organization.

Staff members for the nation’s largest teachers’ union will be locked out of work until a contract is reached, after their work stoppage ended the union’s largest event of the year in Philadelphia.

The National Education Association informed its staff union of the decision on July 7, a spokesperson said. Nearly 300 staff members working at the union’s headquarters in Washington will be affected by the lockout. They will not be paid, and won’t work, until they reach agreement on a contract. The staff organization’s contract ended May 31.

The decision comes after the National Education Association Staff Organization’s three day strike ended the NEA’s annual representative assembly one day after it got under way. The representative assembly, held for four days over the Fourth of July weekend, brings together thousands of Ķvlog from across the country to vote on the union’s priorities, budget, and strategic plan for the year ahead.

Tensions have been steadily increasing between the NEA and its staff union. NEA staff walked off the job for the first time in 50 years in June over what they said were unfair labor practices.

In a statement, the NEA criticized staff for “abandoning thousands of NEA members from across the country who traveled to the representative assembly, many at their own personal expense, and depriving them of the opportunity to convene and deliberate the business of the union.”

“As NEA members and students across the country prepare to go back to school, we cannot allow NEASO to continue disrupting the work of our members through intermittent, unprotected strikes” under the National Labor Relations Act, a spokesperson said in an email.

The staff organization has filed three unfair labor practice charges with the National Labor Relations Board, citing unilateral workplace changes in retaliation and denial of holiday pay.

NEA officials contest those charges, and said that they believe the strikes are related to contract negotiations. Key sticking points include wages—the two sides are more than $10 million apart, the union said—and telework.

“The NEA management’s punitive lockout of its own employees is a dangerous, reckless, and reactionary move that undermines the rights of every union worker in this country,” said NEASO President Robin McLean in a statement. “These are clear union-busting techniques that will not be tolerated. I cannot imagine it lands well that the nation’s largest union is locking out its staff union.”

The representative assembly has only been canceled three other times since it began more than a century ago due to war and the COVID-19 pandemic. President Joe Biden, the union’s choice for the November presidential election, was expected to address delegates but canceled, citing his refusal to cross the picket line.

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