Amid Teacher Strike Trend, the Least OR Lawmakers Can Do Is Bring Union Negotiations Out of the Dark

School-closing strikes, regardless of the reasons behind them, should not be a common occurrence. Most states prohibit teacher walkouts because policymakers tend to prefer having strict boundaries when resolving disputes rather than resorting to shutting down public schools.

Yet they’re becoming increasingly common, even where — in Massachusetts, for example — strikes by teachers are strictly against the law.

Supporters of the teacher unions involved, all of which are part of the largest teachers union in the United States, the National Education Association (NEA), may argue that the strikes are a regrettable but essential last resort.

But it could also be because the NEA is encouraging affiliates to use strikes offensively.

In an article published by the NEA in September, there is no attempt to hide the intention behind the strikes. The article presents data claiming a connection between teachers’ strikes and increased spending on education (which is not surprising), and it openly states that “the NEA and its partners are striving to ensure that all educators can utilize this right.”

Even more telling, though, was the NEA’s endorsement of teacher strikes not as a last resort but as a strategic weapon to pressure state officials into allocating more taxpayer funding their way. After all, why settle for concessions from the school district when you can go straight to the source?

Exhibit A is Portland, where the NEA’s gushing celebration of the 2023 teacher strike was a bit out of touch with the local reaction. There, the union’s initial strike demands featured attempts to bypass normal policymaking processes by getting Portland Public Schools (PPS) to subsidize things well outside of the classroom, like affordable housing.

That makes sense, given the NEA’s encouragement for teachers to strike over “non-traditional bargaining issues.” But it’s a brazen tactic, and it also comes with an added price tag that districts can’t cover and inevitably calls for state or local bailouts.



Politically, Oregon’s Democrat-controlled legislature isn’t going to ban teacher strikes anytime soon. But lawmakers should at least guarantee taxpayers the ability to see for themselves what unions are asking for at the bargaining table.

Even a modest improvement will do. Earlier this year, the legislature passed Senate Bill 1502, which increased transparency in educational decisions by requiring all public school districts, college, and university boards to record their meetings and post them online. In testimony supporting the bill, chief sponsor and Senate President Rob Wagner declared, “What could be more important than including all voices in our democracy — especially as it relates to our children and decisions that impact their education[?]”

Obviously, negotiations between public schools and teachers unions—which involve some of the most important decisions impacting education—should adhere to these same values.

In 2023, PPS and the Portland Association of Teachers (PAT) took the initiative to record and stream many of their collective bargaining negotiations online, which is commendable. In the upcoming legislative session, Oregon lawmakers should follow their lead by adopting a simple amendment to the statute enacted by Senate Bill 1502, codifying this practice into law.

Better yet, lawmakers could finally fix the problems in existing state law that allow the negotiations between government officials and labor unions to be conducted in secret. Not only do Oregon’s open meeting laws generally allow the negotiations to occur behind closed doors, they also permit a separate workaround whereby the negotiations aren’t even considered “meetings” under the applicable laws to begin with.

Either way, it’s time for transparency, and not even the NEA and friends should object.

PPS and PAT recorded their meetings, and the NEA now supports the idea of open negotiations, at least on paper. During the 2021-22 school year, the NEA even awarded the Salem-Keizer Education Association (SKEA) a grant for the purpose of improving member participation through open collective bargaining as a way to bring membership back from an “all-time low” resulting, it claimed, from the work of the Freedom Foundation to educate teachers about their right to refrain from union membership. Ironically, the Freedom Foundation has long supported transparent bargaining as beneficial for both taxpayers and union members.

Now’s the time to make it official.


Ben Straka is a research and government affairs associate for the Freedom Foundation, a nonprofit organization that works to promote individual liberty, free enterprise, and limited, accountable government.

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