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Teachers at Barrack Hebrew Academy set to strike

Teachers at Jack M. Barrack Hebrew Academy, a private day school on the Main Line, announced today that contract talks with administrators had broken down and they will strike beginning Monday.

Administrators responded by canceling all of next week's activities.

Formerly known as Akiba Hebrew Academy, the school moved last year from Merion Station to a new 35-acre campus in Bryn Mawr.

The school's 55 teachers have been working without a contract since Aug. 31, said Jared Freedman, a spokesman for the Jack Barrack Teachers Association.

"It's sad the strike had to come about," Freedman said. "But it wasn't what we wanted to do to improve the contract. It's because of what they wanted to take away from us."

Freedman said contract talks reached an impasse over teachers' pensions.

"We had expected having to pay more into our medical plan and not taking a pay raise in the first year, which in these days is unheard of," Freedman said. "But the one thing we thought they'd never take away from us was our pensions."

The Teachers Association had settled for smaller salaries in previous contracts in return for the school's matching up to 7 percent of each teacher's pension fund contribution, Freedman said.

During contract negotiations this year, school management initially sought to eliminate the matching funds.

"They originally said they were taking back all the matching funds for the first two years," Freedman said. "Since then, they've come up a little bit, but not to where we have to be."

Freedman said the school was having financial problems since the move to the Bryn Mawr campus.

"Nobody told them they had to buy a new facility," Freedman said. "They claim that fund-raising is not going as well as it should go. But they shouldn't be trying to make up the difference on our teachers' backs."

Administrators distributed an e-mail today announcing all classes and extracurricular events were canceled Nov. 16 through the 20th until further notice.

"We have offered our faculty as generous a compensation package as our stretched finances permit," said Board President Ariele Klausner in a statement. "Unfortunately, the Association's compensation proposals far exceed our ability to fund them, and we have been unable to reach a settlement at this time."

The Academy's Head of School, Dr. Steven M. Brown, declined to comment.

The Academy serves 315 students in grades six through 12. According to the Academy's Web site, upper school tuition was $22,850 for the 2008-2009 school year.


Contact staff writer Sam Wood at 215-854-2796 or at samwood@phillynews.com.

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