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

File Photo, Kent Reporter
Medical examiner identifies man fatally stabbed in Kent

27-year-old man died from stab wound of chest at West Hill apartment complex

Kent Mayor Dana Ralph could see her salary go up in 2026 to $20,000 per month, a 9.2% increase. COURTESY PHOTO, City of Kent
Proposal would boost Kent mayor’s annual salary to $240,000

A 9.2% increase from current pay of $219,720; City Council pay to remain the same

File Photo, Kent Reporter
Man, 26, fatally stabbed at Kent West Hill apartment complex

Officers responded early Saturday morning, Feb. 7 to the 25700 block of 27th Place South

Courtesy File Photo, U.S. Immigration and Customs
Kent School District issues staff protocols for ICE

Message aims to prepare staff should immigration authorities appear at or near schools

File Photo, Kent Reporter
Train strikes, kills Kent man, 64, in wheelchair on tracks

Feb. 4 incident at East James Street second death by train in three days in Kent

File Photo, Kent Reporter
Kent Police Blotter: Jan. 12-18

Incidents include attempted robbery, carjackings

File Photo, Kent Reporter
Kent woman standing on tracks struck and killed by train | Update

Woman identified; reportedly waving at train Feb. 2 in the 1000 block of First Avenue North

Image courtesy King County Sheriff's Office
Super Bowl patrols underway as part of ‘Night of 1,000 Stars’ campaign

Emphasis patrols will be active in King County to encourage safe driving

COURTESY PHOTO, Sound Transit
No light rail service in Kent on Saturday, Feb. 7

Sound Transit to close line between Federal Way and Angle Lake for maintenance; buses will run

t
Kent high school students hit streets to protest ICE

Hundreds oppose actions that resulted in deaths of protesters in Minneapolis and removal of immigrants

United States Courthouse in Seattle. COURTESY PHOTO, USDOJ
Man pleads guilty to home invasion robberies in Kent, elsewhere

Armed, masked men entered homes in 2022 and tied up victims as they ransacked places

t
King County Metro rolls out new fleet of battery-electric buses

Routes in Kent, Auburn and Renton among the cities that will feature the new buses