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San Francisco teachers went on strike for the first time since 1979, closing schools for over 50,000 students. The strike, with no end date, centers on disagreements over raises and rising health care costs. Negotiations continue between the union and the school district.
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- San Francisco Teachers Walk Out for the First Time Since 1979
- Simplified Title
- San Francisco Teachers Strike Over Health Care Costs
- AI Excerpt
- San Francisco teachers went on strike for the first time since 1979, closing schools for over 50,000 students. The strike, with no end date, centers on disagreements over raises and rising health care costs. Negotiations continue between the union and the school district.
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Education Labor Unions Strikes San Francisco California Health Care Costs Teachers
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- News
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1.000
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{ "tone": "informative", "perspective": "neutral", "audience": "general", "credibility_indicators": [ "expert_quotes", "data_cited", "reporting" ] }
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Completed
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- Donato V. Pompo
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- February 10, 2026 at 4:55 PM
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The walkout has no end date.Credit...Stephen Lam\/ReutersBy Soumya KarlamanglaLaurel Rosenhall and Shawn HublerSoumya Karlamangla reported from San FranciscoFeb. 9, 2026San Francisco schools will be closed Tuesday as the city\u2019s first teachers strike in nearly half a century is likely to stretch into a second day, keeping roughly 50,000 students out of classrooms.The teachers walked out on Monday morning after their union, United Educators of San Francisco, could not reach an agreement on raises and health care costs despite nearly a year of negotiations with the San Francisco Unified School District. The union represents about 6,000 teachers, librarians, social workers and nurses who work in more than 100 schools in the city.The strike has no set end date. The last teachers strike in San Francisco, in 1979, lasted for nearly seven weeks, making it one of the longest in state history.District officials announced on Monday afternoon that schools would stay closed on Tuesday since negotiations with the teachers union were continuing. \u201cWe know that every day that students are not in school, it\u2019s a day of missed learning and missed connections with their peers and teachers. We want this strike to end,\u201d Laura Dudnick, district spokeswoman, said at a media briefing. San Francisco\u2019s closure could be a harbinger in California, as teachers unions have made a concerted effort to pressure districts for more compensation in recent months. Besides the walkout in San Francisco, educators in Los Angeles, San Diego and two Sacramento-area school districts have authorized strikes as part of their ongoing contract negotiations.In San Francisco, the local labor union said that rising health care premiums had driven many employees to leave the school district, California\u2019s sixth largest, resulting in vacancies that hurt student instruction.On Monday morning, Cassondra Curiel, the president of the union, the United Educators of San Francisco, led a rally on the steps of Mission High School, where dozens of teachers, dressed in red, rattled tambourines and hoisted signs calling for higher wages. Some brought their children, who were out of school for the day.Ms. Curiel said she had been talking regularly with San Francisco\u2019s mayor, Daniel Lurie, but ultimately rejected his request on Sunday to postpone the strike to allow more time to negotiate. The affordability crisis for educators needed to be addressed immediately, she said, adding that the union wouldn\u2019t back down from any of its demands.\u201cThe only way to call off a strike is to come to an agreement,\u201d she said. San Francisco parents said they empathized with teachers struggling to make ends meet in one of the nation\u2019s most expensive cities. But they were frustrated that the two sides couldn\u2019t reach a deal \u2014 and that their children would pay the price.Some said the strike brought back memories of closures during the pandemic. San Francisco Unified had one of the nation\u2019s longest Covid shutdowns, and students did not have full in-person instruction for more than an entire school year.Autumn Brown Garibay, 40, said that campuses were closed when her daughter, currently in fifth grade, was a kindergartner in 2020.\u201cShe literally looked at me and said, \u2018This again?\u2019\u201d said Ms. Brown Garibay, who works in marketing technology and lives in the city\u2019s Mission District. \u201cHow long will it last? Just like with Covid, I don\u2019t know, nobody knows.\u201dThe California Teachers Association, the statewide teachers union, launched a campaign last year called \u201cWe Can\u2019t Wait\u201d to encourage and support local unions taking more forceful actions in labor negotiations.David Goldberg, the California Teachers Association president, said that teachers have watched their colleagues win sizable pay increases by going on strike. Teachers in Richmond, Calif., across the bay from San Francisco, negotiated an 8 percent raise over two years after a nearly weeklong strike in December.\u201cFolks, frankly, are learning from each other,\u201d Mr. Goldberg said in an interview. \u201cIt\u2019s something we\u2019ve never done, and it\u2019s a very exciting model for how to really build power in a huge state like ours.\u201dImageWest Contra Costa Unified teachers and supporters went on strike in December. Teachers unions across California have made a concerted effort in recent months to push for higher compensation.Credit...Jessica Christian\/San Francisco Chronicle, via Associated PressIn San Francisco, health care costs for teachers have been the biggest sticking point. While the district completely pays for individual coverage, a teacher with family health care coverage pays about $1,200 a month. That could soon increase to $1,500 a month, according to the union.Employers in various sectors have charged more for dependent coverage to offset health care inflation.\u201cSome of us only ever see half of our paychecks after health care premiums are taken out. This is not acceptable or sustainable,\u201d Teanna Tillery, a member of the union\u2019s bargaining team, said at a media briefing last week announcing the strike.The union has asked the district to cover all medical premiums for its members and their dependents, as well as provide a 9 percent raise over two years. The district\u2019s most recent offer included a 6 percent raise over two years, as well paying a large portion of family health care costs for three years, using funds from a local tax. After three years, the district could either stop paying for the additional coverage or secure funding to extend it.The union has said it will not back down from demanding that the district fully pay for medical coverage for dependents. Ms. Dudnick, the district spokeswoman, said the district was grappling with a major budget deficit and that health care coverage would need to be worked out at the bargaining table. . Even though California is providing a record amount of state funding per student \u2014 and its school funding has been above the national average for the last several years \u2014 some school districts are still struggling to balance their budgets. Student enrollment continues to decline in California, and districts receive less money overall when they educate fewer students.Many districts have not been able to close schools because of community and labor opposition, and they have not cut staff in parallel with their loss of students.At the same time, districts are seeing higher rates of absenteeism than before the pandemic, which further hurts their funding because they receive money based on how many days students attend, said Tony Thurmond, the state superintendent of public instruction.Mr. Thurmond, an ally of teachers unions, has proposed legislation to change how California funds its schools \u2014 to base the formula on the number of students enrolled in a district, rather than the average daily attendance \u2014 but, at an estimated cost of more than $3 billion, it has stalled in the legislature.\u201cEven though California\u2019s legislature and governor have provided a lot of funding to our schools, it\u2019s just proving to not be enough,\u201d said Mr. Thurmond, who is running for governor.ImageTony Thurmond, the state superintendent of public instruction, passed out backpacks and books to elementary school students in the Los Angeles Unified School District last August.Credit...Gabriella Angotti-Jones for The New York TimesIn Southern California, the teachers union in the Los Angeles Unified School District, California\u2019s largest, declared an impasse in contract talks in December, and last month authorized a strike if an agreement could not be reached through mediation.The union, United Teachers Los Angeles, is seeking to increase starting teacher salaries to $80,000 and asking for smaller classroom sizes in some grades. District officials say that Los Angeles Unified cannot afford the union\u2019s proposal.Julie Van Winkle, a vice president at United Teachers Los Angeles, said that the coordination was inspired by the 2018 \u201cRed for Ed\u201d movement, in which thousands of teachers in politically conservative states walked off the job to demand higher pay and more school funding.\u201cThe specifics of what San Francisco is fighting for and what we in Los Angeles are fighting for are not completely the same, but there\u2019s a big overlap in that Venn diagram,\u201d Ms. Van Winkle said.U.T.L.A. teachers went on a sympathy strike in March 2023 when support staff walked out, shutting down schools for three days. The last teachers-only strike in the district was in 2019, when teachers walked out for six days. Before that, the last strike by Los Angeles Unified teachers was in 1989.In San Francisco, Ryan Alias, a high school English teacher, pays $1,500 per month for health care coverage for his wife and two daughters. That\u2019s a large portion of his annual salary that could otherwise help them buy a house and pay off their student loans, he said, and not have to consider moving to somewhere cheaper.\u201cThis is a life-changing amount of money,\u201d said Mr. Alias, who has been teaching for 12 years. \u201cFor my family and many of us, this is a stability issue for this district. We need to know we\u2019re comfortable putting down roots in this district and growing our skills here and continuing to be part of the community.\u201dImageMcKinley Elementary School, in the heart of San Francisco.Credit...Lauren Segal for The New York TimesMeredith Dodson, executive director of the San Francisco Parents Coalition, said that she believes teachers deserve higher pay and benefits.But she also worried about lower-income parents who couldn\u2019t afford child care or to take days off work to watch their kids during the strike. Her group, a nonprofit that was formed in 2020, surveyed 700 parents last week and found that nearly a quarter would have to miss work if a strike took place. Many parents were very concerned about disruptions for their children, including learning loss, she said.Ms. Dodson, who has a second-grader and a fourth-grader, said she was particularly frustrated by what felt like a statewide push for strikes.\u201cWe don\u2019t want to see our district and our students pulled into something that is broader than our local situation,\u201d she said. \u201cOur local situation could be very different from what\u2019s happening in Santa Cruz or L.A. or Monterey or Fresno.\u201dSoumya Karlamangla is a Times reporter who covers California. She is based in the Bay Area.Laurel Rosenhall is a Sacramento-based reporter covering California politics and government for The Times.Shawn Hubler is The Times\u2019s Los Angeles bureau chief, reporting on the news, trends and personalities of Southern California.A version of this article appears in print on Feb. 10, 2026, Section A, Page 17 of the New York edition with the headline: Teachers in San Francisco Begin Strike Over Impasse On Health Costs and Pay. Order Reprints | Today\u2019s Paper | SubscribeSee more on: California Teachers Assn, United Teachers Los AngelesRead 258 commentsShare full articleRelated ContentAdvertisementSKIP ADVERTISEMENT", "ai_headline": "San Francisco Teachers Walk Out for the First Time Since 1979", "ai_simplified_title": "San Francisco Teachers Strike Over Health Care Costs", "ai_excerpt": "San Francisco teachers went on strike for the first time since 1979, closing schools for over 50,000 students. The strike, with no end date, centers on disagreements over raises and rising health care costs. 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<html lang="en" class="story nytapp-vi-article nytapp-vi-story story nytapp-vi-article " data-nyt-compute-assignment="fallback" xmlns:og="http://opengraphprotocol.org/schema/" data-rh="lang,class"><head> <meta charset="utf-8"> <title>San Francisco Teachers Begin Strike, Closing School for 50,000 Students - The New York Times</title> <meta data-rh="true" name="robots" content="noarchive, max-image-preview:large"><meta data-rh="true" name="description" content="The strike closed public schools for more than 50,000 students in the city and had no end date. Health care costs are a key issue in negotiations."><meta data-rh="true" property="twitter:url" content="https://www.nytimes.com/2026/02/09/us/san-francisco-teachers-strike.html"><meta data-rh="true" property="twitter:title" content="San Francisco Teachers Begin Strike, Closing School for 50,000 Students"><meta data-rh="true" property="twitter:description" content="The strike closed public schools for more than 50,... - Parsed Content
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AdvertisementSKIP ADVERTISEMENTSupported bySKIP ADVERTISEMENTSan Francisco Teachers Walk Out for the First Time Since 1979The strike closed public schools for more than 50,000 students in the city and had no end date. Health care costs are a key issue in negotiations.Listen to this article Β· 9:25 min Learn moreShare full articleSan Francisco teachers went on strike Monday for the first time since 1979. The walkout has no end date.Credit...Stephen Lam/ReutersBy Soumya KarlamanglaLaurel Rosenhall and Shawn HublerSoumya Karlamangla reported from San FranciscoFeb. 9, 2026San Francisco schools will be closed Tuesday as the cityβs first teachers strike in nearly half a century is likely to stretch into a second day, keeping roughly 50,000 students out of classrooms.The teachers walked out on Monday morning after their union, United Educators of San Francisco, could not reach an agreement on raises and health care costs despite nearly a year of negotiations with the San Francisco Unified Scho...
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Claims from this Source (37)
All claims extracted from this source document.
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Simplified: The walkout has no end date
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Simplified: District officials announced on Monday afternoon that schools would stay closed on Tuesday
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The last teachers-only strike in the district was in 2019, when teachers walked out for six days.0.950π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Labor , Education π a116311a-fff4-4e6e-9e0b-764326ab3a5cSimplified: The last teachers-only strike in the district was in 2019 when teachers walked out for six days
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Simplified: Thatβs a large portion of his annual salary that could otherwise help them buy a house and pay off their student loans he said and not have to conside...
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βThis is a life-changing amount of money,β said Mr. Alias, who has been teaching for 12 years.0.950Simplified: This is a life-changing amount of money Ryan Alias said who has been teaching for 12 years
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Simplified: Many parents were very concerned about disruptions for their children including learning loss she said