As San Francisco teachers strike continues, nearly 50,000 students remain out of classrooms
Nearly 50,000 students in San Francisco remain out of classrooms as a teachers strike enters its third day, disrupting instruction across 120 schools in the San Francisco Unified School District. About 6,000 educators represented by the United Educators of San Francisco walked out over demands for higher wages, fully funded family health care and the filling of vacant positions affecting special education and student services. The strike follows nearly a year of negotiations between the union and district officials, according to Associated Press.
Families adjust as uncertainty stretches
For many parents, the immediate challenge is not the contract dispute but the absence of a clear timeline. Connor Haught, who works in construction and is able to work from home, has been balancing virtual meetings with supervising arts and crafts projects for his two daughters. His wife works evenings at a restaurant. The family plans to keep their children at home during the first week of the strike and arrange play dates and local outings. Plans beyond that remain uncertain. Other families are relying on after school programmes that have shifted to full day schedules, while some are turning to relatives or informal support networks for childcare. The strain is sharper for households without flexible work arrangements. Sonia Sanabria, a restaurant cook, stayed home to care for her five year old daughter and eleven year old nephew. She said missing work means losing income. Her elderly mother helps with school drop off and pick up, but cannot manage full day care. Sanabria has been assigning reading, writing and mathematics exercises at home while monitoring developments in negotiations.
The terms of the dispute
The union has sought a nine percent salary increase over two years, arguing that it would help offset the high cost of living in San Francisco. District officials have offered a six percent increase spread over three years. The district faces a one hundred million dollar deficit and is under state oversight because of a long standing financial crisis, according to the Associated Press. Officials have cited budget constraints in rejecting the union’s wage proposal. Superintendent Maria Su said there had been progress in talks, including discussions on support for homeless families, training for teachers in the use of artificial intelligence tools and the establishment of guidelines for such tools in classrooms. However, agreement has not been reached on wages or family health benefits.
Students at the centre of competing pressures
Teachers on picket lines have stated that their demands are tied to staffing stability and the retention of educators. Union leaders argue that competitive compensation and comprehensive health benefits are necessary to maintain fully staffed schools and consistent services for students. District leaders contend that any agreement must reflect fiscal realities. With state oversight in place, additional spending carries implications beyond the immediate contract cycle. For students, the consequences are immediate. Instruction has paused. Meal access for some depends on community organisations and churches offering support. Parents are improvising day by day. The longer the strike continues, the more uneven its impact may become. Families with flexible employment or savings can absorb short term closures more easily. Households dependent on hourly wages face harder choices. Negotiations are expected to continue. Until a settlement is reached, tens of thousands of students in San Francisco remain outside their classrooms, waiting for adults on both sides of the table to find common ground.
