Metro Hillel teachers march outside the school late Monday afternoon. 11111e1 Impasse Day school's board withdraws union recognition; start of school up in air. ALAN HITSKY Associate Editor I n the middle of contract negotiations with its teachers union, the board of Hillel Day School of Metropolitan Detroit on Sunday announced it was withdrawing recognition of the bargaining unit and ceased talks. On Monday, teachers began the school year at a meeting with the administration in which they individ- ually signed to receive a booklet of terms and condi- tions for employment. Students are scheduled to begin classes next Monday, Aug. 29. Meanwhile, teachers began informational picketing in front of the school on Middlebelt Road in Farmington Hills before and after school hours. The teachers were continuing to work their regular hours in preparation for the new school year. . "We still have a contract until Aug. 31," said Robin Lash, president of the Hillel Federation of Teachers and a 17-year Hillel teacher. On Monday and Tuesday, as the Jewish News prepared for publication, she declined to speculate what action the union might take. The Hillel board acted following a Michigan Appeals Court decision last week that said Brother Rice High School, a Catholic school in Bloomfield Township, did not have to allow their teachers to vote on unioniza- tion. The court ruled that the Michigan Employment Relations Commission did not have jurisdiction over a parochial school. Hillel board president Rob Goodman of West Bloomfield said Hillel took the action to withdraw recognition of the union because "the educational needs of our children are best served by Hillel Day School's teachers, administrators and parents interact- ing directly and candidly with one another, unimpeded by organizations outside the Hillel community." Goodman said the board had consulted its labor attor- ney before taking the action. Steve Freedman, Hillel head of school, said that "all critical aspects of the former bargaining agreement" were maintained in the new terms and conditions booklet. That statement was disputed by the teachers. Freedman and Goodman said that a 2 percent raise and step increases for experience would provide the teachers with salary increases of 4 to 17 percent. The teachers already receive a health package, and a 403(b) retirement plan after two years; Hillel contributes 7 percent of salary if the teachers contribute 4 percent. Goodman said, "This is the best package the school can offer these teachers." According to the administration, Hillel's full-time teachers last year averaged $52,892. The highest teacher salary was $60,141 and starting salaries were $30,975. Goodman said Hillel teacher pay ranks favor- ably in comparison with figures provided by independ- ent school associations. Freedman believes Hillel teachers feel respected by the administration. "We are representing ourselves hon- orably and in good faith," he said. He called the teachers "a dedicated staff of educators who also serve as mentors." Teacher president Robin Lash said the two sides had been bargaining on a new contract since October 2004. Negotiations were halted for vacations in July, but had resumed Aug. 2. As of Sunday, she said, the two sides were working on some educational issues and had just begun talks on economic issues: wages, the length of the school day, the school- calendar, overtime and stipends. "Some of the language [in Hillel's terms and condi- tions booklet] is radically -different," Lash said. "They have maintained some things that were important to us, but some things we agreed to have been radically changed or eliminated." Due process for reprimands or dismissal was one item Freedman said was maintained, but Lash said it was changed. "We want due process," she said, "not a unilateral process." A group of Michigan labor leaders met with Lash and other Hillel Federation of Teachers leaders Monday night, and'all the Hillel teachers were scheduled to meet Tuesday night. David Hecker of Huntington Woods, president of the Michigan Federation of Teachers, the parent body of the Hillel teachers union, called the Hillel adminis- tration's move "abhorrent. From my Hebrew school days, I remember the Rabbi Hillel quote: 'If I am only for myself, then what am I?' "They need to remember who the school is named for. We're hopeful that we can convince the Hillel board to reverse this decision and continue what is right," Hecker said. The school has 87 teachers. All 60 eligible teachers are union members. The other 27 are part-time, spe- cialists, resource teachers or librarians. It is believed that Hillel is the only Jewish school in the metropolitan area that has a collective bargaining unit. Lash declined to speculate on what actions the teach- ers might take. She said Tuesday there has been no fur- ther communications between the union and the administration after Sunday afternoon. "Truthfully," she said, "[both sides] are all good peo- ple and we all care about Hillel Day School. But we have a philosophical difference about labor-manage- ment issues ... Hopefully, by this time next week, this will all be forgotten." ❑ 8/25 2005 27