The Anoka-Hennepin teachers union will vote this week on whether to authorize a potential strike, escalating a monthslong contract dispute over pay and rising health insurance costs.
The vote, held Wednesday through Saturday, comes after months of negotiations have failed to reach a settlement. The district is the largest in the state and serves about 38,000 students in the northern Twin Cities suburbs.
The negotiation process began in July and has included eight meetings, including three with mediation. Union leaders list salary and benefits as the biggest unresolved issues. Premiums for the district’s self-insured health plan rose 22% this spring, said John Wolhaupter, president of the Anoka-Hennepin teachers union.
“We’re trying to find a way to make sure that the teachers of this district are not being asked to take home less pay over the next two years than they did last year,” Wolhaupter said.
Teachers unions in Minnesota reach deals
According to Education Minnesota, the state teachers union, more than half (178 of 327) of school districts in Minnesota have settled their two-year contracts with their educators as of Dec. 16. That pace of reaching agreements tracks with the average timeline over the last decade, although the 2023-25 cycle of negotiations was unusually slow.
Last month, Minneapolis Public Schools and the teachers union reached a tentative contract agreement after seven months of negotiations, just days before a planned strike. That agreement included a 2% pay raise for teachers.
The average salary increase for this negotiation cycle across the state is 2.3% in 2025-26 and 2.3% in 2026-27, according to Education Minnesota.
Monica Byron, the president of Education Minnesota, said administrators and union leaders across the state are trying to negotiate amid rapidly rising health care costs. That sometimes means weighing “adequate health care to educators” with larger class sizes or cuts to programs, she said.