Kent School District teachers picket alongside the busy road outside Jenkins Creek Elementary School in Covington. “We need help for the kids to learn,” said special education teacher Connie Compton, who has worked at Jenkins Creek for 25 years. BAILEY JO JOSIE/Sound Publishing.

Kent School District teachers picket alongside the busy road outside Jenkins Creek Elementary School in Covington. “We need help for the kids to learn,” said special education teacher Connie Compton, who has worked at Jenkins Creek for 25 years. BAILEY JO JOSIE/Sound Publishing.

Day 2 of Kent teachers’ strike: No school on Friday, Aug. 26

Contract negotiations continue between district and union bargaining teams

There will be no school on Friday, Aug. 26 in the Kent School District as a teachers’ union strike continues into day two without a contract agreement.

“After negotiating into the night, Wednesday, Aug. 24, our negotiation teams continued the mediation process Thursday morning and will continue as long as it takes to reach an agreement,” according to a district statement Thursday evening that announced there would no school on Friday.

Both sides are in mediation provided through the state Public Employment Relations Commission.

There was no school on Thursday, Aug. 25 due to the strike. That was the scheduled first day of school for the 2022-2023 school year.

About 95% of teachers who attended a Kent Education Association (KEA, union) meeting on Aug. 22 voted to strike if no contract agreement could be reached.

“The school district has not really been negotiation in good faith,” said Kim Cook, a third-grade teacher at Horizon Elementary in an Aug. 25 KEA Facebook post. “We’re willing to negotiate, but our asks aren’t just for us. We’re asking for things like mental health support for our students and for our special education teachers not to be absolutely drowning.”

The district said in its statement:

”Postponing the start of school affects everyone in our community and places a hardship on our families,” according to the district statement. “Please know that all meetings, kindergarten assessments and activities are canceled at the elementary and middle schools and will be rescheduled when school resumes. High school athletics continue as scheduled.”

The KEA said the main issues are mental health support for students, competitive salaries, lower class sizes for teachers and smaller caseloads for specialists such as special education teachers.

The district said it’s working to reach an agreement.

“Our bargaining teams are actively engaged in seeking solutions that will end the strike/work stoppage, reopen schools, and return to a cooperative and respectful learning environment,” according to the district statement.

Kent has 42 schools and academies across the district. The district has about 2,000 teachers and just under 24,000 students.

Teachers were on strike for about three weeks in 2009, which delayed the start of school until Sept. 15.


Talk to us

Please share your story tips by emailing editor@kentreporter.com.

To share your opinion for publication, submit a letter through our website https://www.kentreporter.com/submit-letter/. Include your name, address and daytime phone number. (We’ll only publish your name and hometown.) Please keep letters to 300 words or less.

More in News

t
SeaTac man, 21, fatally shot in vehicle in Kent on West Hill

Someone ran up and fired multiple shots into vehicle Nov. 21 at Veterans Drive and Military Road

Kentwood High School, 25800 164th Ave. SE, in Covington, remained without power Thursday morning, Nov. 21, according to Puget Sound Energy. COURTESY PHOTO, Kent School District
Kent schools remain closed due to windstorm damage, power outages

Second consecutive day of closures Thursday, Nov. 21 across the Kent School District

t
Kent-based Puget Sound Fire calls windstorm ‘one for the ages’

Agency responds to 308 calls in 12-hour period, including 245 for storm-related issues

Crews clear trees from State Route 18, which the Washington State Patrol closed in both directions Wednesday, Nov. 20, from Issaquah Hobart to I-90 over Tiger Mountain because of fallen trees during a windstorm. COURTESY PHOTO, Washington State Patrol
Windstorm closes Kent schools, roads due to fallen trees

Many without power in areas of Kent and beyond

t
“Prolific” vehicular theft suspect arrested in Renton

Kent man holds 13 prior convictions and 41 arrests.

tt
Green Kent volunteer program wraps up season at city park

Volunteers remove invasive species, plant native trees and shrubs at Mill Creek Canyon Earthworks Park

t
Copper-wire thieves damage Kent Senior Center roof refrigeration unit

Facility temporarily loses commercial kitchen refrigerator but staff, community keep meals going

t
16-year-old girl dies in Covington single-car crash

Teen was driving when car crashed into a tree Nov. 15 along SE 256th Street just east of Kent

t
Kent Police Blotter: Oct. 24-Nov. 7

Incidents include carjacking, juvenile fight, stolen vehicle pursuit

t
State Patrol catches a pair of motorcycles going over 100 mph on I-5

See a video of their arrest. Agency uses air surveillance to pursue from Federal Way to Renton

Photos by Bailey Jo Josie/Sound Publishing
Official ribbon cutting for the Kent Valley Bezos Academy, which is still accepting applications for the 2024-2025 school year.
Kent Valley Bezos Academy offers student-driven preschool experience

New school offers free enrollment to children of income-eligible families