Washington, DC — Over 80 percent of teachers and staff at Mundo Verde Bilingual Public Charter School have signed authorization cards to join the American Federation of Teachers—
The petition at the high-performing school in the Truxton Circle neighborhood comes after a monthslong organizing effort to honor the school’s values of collaboration and cooperation and to win more resources for kids. If recognition is granted, Mundo Verde would become the second unionized charter school in the nation’s capital.
Members of the Mundo Verde Union wrote to the school’s board to ask for recognition on April 12. The school responded last Friday, proposing meetings this week. The school’s “wall-to-wall” bargaining unit includes 115 teachers and school support staff who are eager to work with management to negotiate a flexible and mutually beneficial first contract.
Under federal labor law, a union can be voluntarily granted recognition by an employer, or workers can file a formal petition with the National Labor Relations Board that may lead to a contested election. Educators are calling on the school’s management to embrace the first, less contentious, path.
Fourth-grade teacher Danielle McCormick said: “Mundo Verde staff are profoundly committed to the school’s vision of social justice, equity
“We are fighting to manage our real-life stressors so we can focus completely on our students and our mission,” kindergarten teacher Andrea Molina said.
“We’ve experienced some uncertainty and disappointment around our healthcare coverage,” she added. “We now understand that important, even life-changing, benefits like healthcare should be negotiated openly, with all the
Mundo Verde educators are organizing under the umbrella of the District of Columbia Alliance of Charter Teachers and Staff, affiliated nationally with the 1.7 million-member AFT.
AFT President Randi Weingarten said: “Like so many other educators at charter schools, those at Mundo Verde want to form a union to have a real impact on the decisions that shape their lives and their students’ lives.”
The AFT represents 7,500 members at 237 charter schools in 15 states and the District of Columbia.
Follow AFT President Randi Weingarten:http://twitter.com/rweingarten