San Francisco Teachers End Strike After Tentative Deal

Two-year tentative deal includes equivalent 5% raise and fully funded family health benefits starting Jan. 1, 2027.

Overview

A summary of the key points of this story verified across multiple sources.

1.

San Francisco teachers reached a tentative agreement to end a strike, and SFUSD said schools will reopen to staff Friday and to students Wednesday after two holidays.

2.

About 6,000 teachers had walked out starting Monday, leading the district to close all 120 schools and offer independent study for roughly 50,000 students.

3.

The two-year deal provides the equivalent of a 5% raise over two years and fully funded dependent healthcare starting Jan. 1, 2027, the union said.

4.

The union had sought a 9% raise over two years, which it said would cost about $92 million per year, while the district cited a $100 million deficit and had proposed 6% over three years.

5.

The agreement must be approved by the San Francisco Board of Education and by a majority vote of teachers, and it includes protections for immigrant students and limits on using AI to replace teachers.

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Analysis

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Center-leaning sources report this deal neutrally, presenting both union and district perspectives, concrete terms (a two‑year, ~5% raise and fully funded family healthcare), and financial constraints (a $100M deficit, fact‑finder’s 6% compromise). Quotes are clearly labeled and opposing arguments included, with broader context about other California teacher actions.

Sources (3)

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FAQ

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The two-year deal includes the equivalent of a 5% raise for teachers over two years, fully funded family health benefits starting January 1, 2027, an 8.5% raise for classified staff, protections for immigrant students, and limits on AI use to replace teachers.

Schools will reopen to staff on Friday (transition day) and to students on Wednesday, after holidays on Monday (Presidents Day) and Tuesday (Lunar New Year).

The union sought a 9% raise over two years costing $92 million annually, while the district proposed 6% over three years due to a $100 million deficit; the deal provides 5% equivalent for teachers.

Yes, it requires approval by the San Francisco Board of Education and a majority teacher vote. It also includes revisions to special education workloads, sanctuary protections for immigrant and refugee students, and housing protections.

History

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