SAN FRANCISCO — San Francisco teachers reached a tentative agreement Friday with the school district to end their strike, the first such walkout in nearly 50 years.
San Francisco Unified School District Superintendent Maria Su said schools will reopen to staff Friday and to students Wednesday after a four-day weekend for Presidents Day and Lunar New Year.
The strike by about 6,000 public schoolteachers started Monday and the district closed all 120 of its schools and said it would offer independent study to some of its 50,000 students.
The two-year tentative deal will give teachers the equivalent of a 5% raise over two years and, in a big win for the United Educators of San Francisco, the district will offer fully-funded healthcare for dependents starting on Jan. 1, 2027.
The union said San Francisco teachers receive some of the lowest contributions to their health care costs in the Bay Area, with some having to pay at least $1,200 a month for a family health care plan, pushing many to leave.
''This is truly monumental," Su said of the tentative agreement. ''For the first time in our school district's history, we are providing full family health benefits.''
The agreement must be approved by both the San Francisco Board of Education and a majority vote by the teachers union.
Teachers joined picket lines four days ago after last-ditch negotiations failed to reach a new contract. Besides higher wages, more health benefits and more resources for students with special needs, they were also asking for more protections for immigrant students and policies around the use of artificial intelligence.