School Strikes in PA: Measuring the Student Impact in Days Out of Class

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School in PA: Measuring the Student Impact in Eric Montarti, Senior Policy Analyst Allegheny Institute for Public Policy Allegheny Institute Report #13-04 July 2013 by Allegheny Institute for Public Policy. All rights reserved. Note: Nothing written here is to be construed as an attempt to aid or to hinder the passage of any bill before the Pennsylvania General Assembly. 305 Mt. Lebanon Blvd. Suite 208 Pittsburgh, PA 15234 Phone: 412-440-0079 Fax: 412-440-0085 www.alleghenyinstitute.org

Table of Contents Key Findings 2 Introduction 3 Methodology 4 Teacher in Pennsylvania, 1997-2013 5 By Region 6 Southwest PA 6 Southcentral PA 8 Southeast PA 9 Northeast PA 11 Northcentral PA 12 Northwest PA 12 By Districts with More than 100,000 Student 13 By Districts By Number of 14 Conclusion 14 1

Key Findings Pennsylvania is one of eight states that permit school employees to strike. Of the 35 states that permit collective bargaining for school employees (which includes Pennsylvania), 22 prohibit school strikes. From the 1997-98 school year through the 2012-13 school year: o There were 115 teacher strikes in Pennsylvania o These strikes took place in 80 school districts located in 33 of the state s counties o In total these strikes lasted 1,177 days and affected more than 300,000 pupils The focus of this study was to measure the impact on students by way of days out of class. This was calculated by multiplying the number of days a strike lasted by the number of students affected. The statewide total was more than 3.8 million days. There were seven districts that had more than 100,000 cumulative student days out of class. When examined by region, students in Southwest Pennsylvania had over 1.4 million cumulative days out of class due to strikes over the time period. Only one region, Northcentral Pennsylvania, had no strikes. 2

Introduction Strike shall mean a concerted action in failing to report for duty, the willful absence from one s position, the stoppage of work, slowdown or the abstinence in whole or in part from the full, faithful, and proper performance of the duties of employment for the purposes of inducing, influencing or coercing a change in the conditions or compensation or the rights, privileges, or obligations of employment Section 1101-A, Act 88 of 1992 Pennsylvanians know school strikes all too well as it is the perennial leader among the handful of states that actually allow strikes. Based on the most recent report of the Education Commission of the states, only eight states explicitly permit school strikes and our work has shown that Pennsylvania had more strikes in recent years than states that allow strikes but have more school districts. 1 Yet a most fascinating development may have occurred this year. Depending on a ruling on the merits of the dispute in northeastern Pennsylvania, the state may have had its first strike free year since the mid-1970s when reliable data on school strikes became made available. 2 We have written extensively on school strikes in full-length reports, Policy Briefs, and editorials from both a general perspective as well as on specific strikes when they occurred. 3 The purpose of this report is to analyze data from the Pennsylvania School Boards Association (PSBA) covering the last sixteen years of school strikes (1997-98 through 2012-13) and provide the reader with an examination of the student impact by calculating student days disrupted by strikes. There are, of course, many other effects of strikes, including hardships and costs for working parents who must arrange child care when there is no school because of a strike. This report does not attempt to gauge that impact, as important as it might be. Nor does it weigh in on the educational effects of a disrupted school year. Nor does it attempt to measure the impact on students, quality of education and family plans because of days added to the normal end of the school year. Those should be studied but are beyond the scope of the present work. 1 Education Commission of the States State Collective Bargaining Policies for Teachers December 2011 http://www.ecs.org/html/document.asp?chouseid=9978 The report shows that 35 states permit collective bargaining. Of these 35, eight permit strikes, 22 prohibit them, and five are silent on the matter. Fifteen states prohibit collective bargaining: five prohibit school strikes and 10 are silent on the matter. 2 For an explanation of Act 88 of 1992, what it meant to accomplish, and actual results, see the following: Pennsylvania State Education Association Act 88: Collective Bargaining Legislation http://www.psea.org/general.aspx?id=1730 Pennsylvania School Boards Association, Testimony of Brian Boland to House Education Committee, August 2011 http://www.psba.org/issues-advocacy/advocacy-services/legislativetestimony/2011/testimony-strike-free-education-boland-082511.asp Allegheny Institute for Public Policy Testimony to Senate Education Committee, April 22, 2009. Allegheny Institute Blog Was it a Strike or Not? http://www.alleghenyinstitute.org/component/content/article/9/1153.html and PA At a Half Dozen This Year http://www.alleghenyinstitute.org/component/content/article/9/380.html 3 Allegheny Institute Summary Page on Teacher http://www.alleghenyinstitute.org/education/teacherstrikes.html 3

Methodology Data on school strikes covering the period from the 1997-98 school year through the 2012-13 school year were obtained from the PSBA. This data show the district where the strike occurred, the bargaining unit that went on strike (teachers or support staff), the length of the strike, the number of teachers (if it was a teacher strike) and the number of pupils affected. Four strikes that involved an entity other than a school district (such as an intermediate unit or a career or technical school) were omitted as were 33 strikes identified as being carried out by support staff. Our reasoning on this latter point was that a support staff strike likely did not close down a school the way a teacher strike would. The key measurement was strike days multiplied by number of pupils affected to arrive at student days out of class. For instance, if a district with 1,000 students had a 10 day teacher strike the resulting student days out of class would be 10,000. We did this so as to make clear comparisons between districts that way a district with a large enrollment that might have had a strike lasting a day or two could be measured alongside a district of small size that had a very long strike or multiple strikes and vice versa. The data reveal that several districts experienced multiple teacher strikes over the period some occurred in the same year, others in different years. When this occurred we totaled the number of days lost from each strike and averaged the number of pupils so that we could measure student days out of class due to strikes on the same basis for districts that had one strike in the time period as well as districts that had multiple strikes over the time period. Tables contain a column that notes the number of strikes carried out in each district over the time frame. The state Department of Education s Institution Finder tool was utilized to determine the county in which the school district was located. 4 Regional maps of Pennsylvania s counties were obtained from the Genealogical Society of Pennsylvania and used to divide the state into six compact regions. 5 4 Pennsylvania School Boards Association, List of PA Public School. Pennsylvania Department of Education Find an Institution http://www.portal.state.pa.us/portal/server.pt/community/find_an_institution/7205 5 Genealogical Society of Pennsylvania http://genpa.org/resources/regions-counties/pa-regions 4

Teacher in Pennsylvania, 1997-2013 By the numbers, there were 115 strikes in total over the period. The high point came in the 2006-07 school year when there were 14 strikes, and the low point was the 2012-13 school year. If the dispute in Old Forge (Lackawanna) is ruled a strike, there would have been one strike that year. If it is ruled a lockout, there will have been no strikes that year, the lowest since reliable data has been made available. 6 Teacher in PA, 1997-2013 16 14 12 10 8 6 8 10 9 5 5 13 8 8 12 14 5 7 6 4 2 0 3 2 0 6 In one theory as to why the number of strikes in Pennsylvania fell in recent years the most recent high point was the 2008-09 school year with seven strikes a now retired official of the Pennsylvania School Boards opined The unions have recognized that the public is financially in a difficult position and now is not necessarily a good time to go on strike and look for sympathy from the voter/taxpayer. The economy is bad. It's tough everywhere right now http://www.post-gazette.com/stories/news/education/pa-teachers-dont-want-to-strike-despite-expired-contracts- 653711/#ixzz2XFVqYlGd 5

By Region There are 500 school districts spread across the Commonwealth s 67 counties. Based on the strike count from 1997-2013, the 115 strikes occurred in 33 counties. Data will initially be presented based by regional location. Southwest Pennsylvania This region had 44 strikes totaling 544 days. With 90,405 pupils affected by the strikes, the cumulative total of student days out of class was 1,485,851. Districts that Had Southwest Pennsylvania Cumulative Data Student 31 44 544 90,405 1,485,851 The district with the most student days lost was Bethel Park (Allegheny): it had two strikes over the time period totaling 40 days. With close to 5,000 students, this resulted in 199,720 student days lost. The highest enrollment district with a strike was Seneca Valley with 7,579 students. It had one strike that lasted 24 days resulting in 181,986 student days lost. There were seven districts that had cumulative strike days of 30 or more. 6

Southwest Pennsylvania District Level Detail District County Student Bethel Park Allegheny 2 40 4,993 199,720 Seneca Valley Butler 1 24 7,579 181,896 Highlands Allegheny 2 31 3,179 98,549 Somerset Somerset 3 33 2,820 93,060 South Butler Butler 2 30 2,805 84,150 Ringgold Washington 2 21 3,650 76,650 Wilkinsburg Allegheny 2 35 2,034 71,190 Hempfield Area Westmorland 1 10 6,475 64,750 Penn Trafford Westmorland 1 12 4,661 55,932 Washington Washington 1 24 2,281 54,744 Richland Cambria 2 32 1,583 50,656 Moon Area Allegheny 1 13 3,700 48,100 Merion Center Area Indiana 2 29 1,650 47,850 Ambridge Area Beaver 2 12 3,174 38,088 Indiana Area Indiana 1 10 3,705 37,050 Homer-Center Indiana 3 30 1,130 33,900 Riverview Allegheny 2 25 1,320 33,000 Peters Twp Washington 1 9 3,307 29,763 Baldwin Whitehall Allegheny 1 7 4,187 29,309 Bethlehem Center Washington 1 19 1,369 26,011 Brownsville Area Fayette 1 11 2,225 24,475 Allegheny Valley Allegheny 1 20 1,041 20,820 Berlin Brothers Valley Somerset 1 17 1,080 18,360 Shaler Area Allegheny 1 3 5,500 16,500 Penn Hills Allegheny 1 3 4,496 13,488 Rochester Area Beaver 1 12 1,039 12,468 Salisbury-Elk Lick Somerset 1 18 411 7,398 Monaca Beaver 1 8 860 6,880 Mt Lebanon Allegheny 1 1 5,670 5,670 McGuffey Washington 1 2 2,019 4,038 Duquesne City Allegheny 1 3 462 1,386 44 544 90,405 1,485,851 7

Southcentral Pennsylvania Districts that Had Southcentral Pennsylvania Cumulative Data Student 5 6 53 14,373 165,590 This region had six strikes in five districts that totaled 53 days. With 14,373 pupils affected, the total number of student days lost was 165,590. There were two strikes in the Juniata County School District, which is a countywide school district serving all pupils. With a cumulative 30 days of strikes affecting 3,405 pupils, the impact in student days lost was 102,150 about 60 percent of the total for the region. Southcentral Pennsylvania District Level Detail District County Student Juniata County Juniata 2 30 3,405 102,150 Carlisle Area Cumberland 1 5 4,728 23,640 Littlestown Area Adams 1 10 2,240 22,400 Tuscarora Franklin 1 5 2,700 13,500 Fairfield Adams 1 3 1,300 3,900 6 53 14,373 165,590 8

Southeast Pennsylvania Districts that Had Southeast Pennsylvania Cumulative Detail Student 23 26 218 147,957 1,439,970 The Southeast Pennsylvania region (it includes Dauphin County, which is not pictured on the map) had 26 strikes in 23 districts totaling 218 days. With 147,957 pupils affected, the total student days lost for the region was 1,439,970. This region had some very large school districts with enrollments over 10,000 students that went on strike over the time period. The Pennsbury District (Bucks) with 11,542 students that had 22 strike days resulted in 253,924 student days lost the highest impact strike in the state over the time period when measured by this indicator of strike impact. 9

Southeast Pennsylvania District Level Detail District County Student Pennsbury Bucks 1 22 11,542 253,924 Central Dauphin Dauphin 1 15 11,400 171,000 West Chester Chester 1 8 11,646 93,168 Souderton Area Montgomery 1 13 6,831 88,803 Bensalem Twp Bucks 1 13 6,765 87,945 Neshaminy Bucks 2 10 8,525 85,250 Downingtown Chester 1 7 11,725 82,075 North Penn Montgomery 1 6 12,693 76,158 Phoenixville Chester 1 23 3,270 75,210 Hatboro Horsham Montgomery 1 11 5,600 61,600 Council Rock Bucks 1 4 12,400 49,600 Saucon Valley Northampton 3 19 2,391 45,429 Parkland Area Lehigh 1 5 8,800 44,000 Perkomien Valley Montgomery 1 11 3,963 43,593 Colonial Montgomery 1 8 4,600 36,800 Wilson Berks 1 6 5,600 33,600 Pottsgrove Montgomery 1 10 3,316 33,160 Upper Moreland Montgomery 1 9 3,299 29,691 Haverford Delaware 1 4 5,507 22,028 Springfield Twp Delaware 1 4 2,100 8,400 Tulpehocken Berks 1 4 1,681 6,724 Annville Cleona Lebanon 1 4 1,603 6,412 Conrad Weiser Berks 1 2 2,700 5,400 26 218 147,957 1,439,970 10

Northeast Pennsylvania This region had 27 strikes in 13 districts totaling 218 days. With 44,316 pupils affected, the total number of student days lost was 449,756. Districts that Had Northeast Pennsylvania Cumulative Data Student 13 27 218 44,136 449,756 This region had two districts that carried out four strikes apiece over the time frame Abington Heights and Old Forge. As mentioned in the introduction, if the 2012-13 dispute in Old Forge is ruled a strike it will have had five strikes in the time frame. Northeast Pennsylvania District Level Detail District County Student Abington Heights Lackawanna 4 31 3,645 112,995 Lake Lehman Luzerne 3 29 2,114 61,306 Crestwood Luzerne 2 20 3,012 60,240 North Schuylkill Schuylkill 2 27 2,019 54,513 Old Forge Lackawanna 4 46 949 43,654 Northwest Area Luzerne 3 20 1,375 27,500 Scranton Lackawanna 1 3 9,100 27,300 Weatherly Area Carbon 3 23 753 17,319 Hazelton Area Luzerne 1 2 8,324 16,648 Tri-Valley Schuylkill 1 11 1,144 12,584 Pocono Mt Monroe 1 1 9,353 9,353 Carbondale Lackawanna 1 3 1,648 4,944 Lackawanna Wyoming 1 2 700 1,400 27 218 44,136 449,756 11

Northcentral Pennsylvania There were no teacher strikes during this time period in this region. Northwest Pennsylvania Districts that Had Northwest Pennsylvania Cumulative Data Student 8 12 144 14,803 294,689 This region had twelve strikes in eight districts that lasted a cumulative 144 days. With 14,803 pupils affected, the student days lost amounted to 294,689. Two districts Brookville and Punxsutawney (both in Jefferson County) had three strikes that exceeded more than thirty days when combined. 12

Northwest Pennsylvania District Level Detail District County Student Punxsutawney Jefferson 3 37 2,779 102,823 Brookville Area Jefferson 3 33 1,902 62,766 Franklin Area Venango 1 23 2,389 54,947 Redbank Valley Clarion 1 21 1,393 29,253 Hermitage Mercer 1 7 2,300 16,100 Reynolds Mercer 1 9 1,400 12,600 All-Clarion Valley Clarion 1 10 940 9,400 Wattsburg Area Erie 1 4 1,700 6,800 12 144 14,803 294,689 By Districts with More than 100,000 Student Moving away from geographic based analysis to looking at the characteristics of strikes statewide, we first see that seven districts had strikes that resulted in the loss of more than 100,000 student days. Districts with More than 100,000 Student Due to District County Student Pennsbury Bucks 1 22 11,542 253,924 Bethel Park Allegheny 2 40 4,993 199,720 Seneca Valley Butler 1 24 7,579 181,896 Central Dauphin Dauphin 1 15 11,400 171,000 Abington Heights Lackawanna 4 31 3,645 112,995 Punxsutawney Jefferson 3 37 2,779 102,823 Juniata County Juniata 2 30 3,405 102,150 These seven districts had thirteen strikes between them totaling almost 200 days. By Districts by Number of We can also see that 23 districts had more than one strike during the time frame. Two districts had four apiece, eight had three apiece, and the remainder had two apiece. 13

Conclusion Districts with More than One Strike District County Student Abington Heights Lackawanna 4 31 3,645 112,995 Old Forge Lackawanna 4 46 949 43,654 Punxsutawney Jefferson 3 37 2,779 102,823 Somerset Somerset 3 33 2,820 93,060 Brookville Area Jefferson 3 33 1,902 62,766 Lake Lehman Luzerne 3 29 2,114 61,306 Saucon Valley Northampton 3 19 2,391 45,429 Homer-Center Indiana 3 30 1,130 33,900 Northwest Area Luzerne 3 20 1,375 27,500 Weatherly Area Carbon 3 23 753 17,319 Bethel Park Allegheny 2 40 4,993 199,720 Juniata County Juniata 2 30 3,405 102,150 Highlands Allegheny 2 31 3,179 98,549 Neshaminy Bucks 2 10 8,525 85,250 South Butler Butler 2 30 2,805 84,150 Ringgold Washington 2 21 3,650 76,650 Wilkinsburg Allegheny 2 35 2,034 71,190 Crestwood Luzerne 2 20 3,012 60,240 North Schuylkill Schuylkill 2 27 2,019 54,513 Richland Cambria 2 32 1,583 50,656 Merion Center Area Indiana 2 29 1,650 47,850 Abmbridge Area Beaver 2 12 3,174 38,088 Riverview Allegheny 2 25 1,320 33,000 We know that Pennsylvania has been the leader in school strikes among the small group of states that actually allow strikes to occur. We also know that previous legislative attempts to prohibit strikes and place Pennsylvania into a large cohort of states where there is collective bargaining but strikes are not permitted have failed. These efforts would have treated school employees the way police officers, firefighters, prison guards, and workers related to the functioning of the courts are treated in Pennsylvania: that it is illegal for them to strike and collective bargaining disputes must be resolved by other means. The totals from 1997 through 2013 show the cumulative record of teacher strikes in Pennsylvania: 115 strikes in 80 districts located in 33 counties of the state. Altogether the strikes totaled 1,177 days and affected 311,674 pupils. When calculated as student days lost to strikes, the number is 3,835,856. 14