Albion teachers declare impasse in contract negotiations with district

By Tom Rivers, Editor Posted 7 July 2026 at 9:45 am

Union seeks mediator to help reach new labor agreement

Photo by Tom Rivers: Some members of the Albion Teachers Association are pictured this morning at the elementary school after the Board of Education went into executive session. The ATA has been working without a contract the past year.

ALBION – The Albion Teachers Association has declared an impasse with the school district after a year has gone by without a new contract in place for the ATA and its 172 members.

The union on Nov. 26, by a 2-to-1 vote, rejected a tentative agreement that was reached between the ATA and district’s negotiating teams, said Mickey Edwards, the district superintendent.

The ATA and the district have been unable to reach an agreement on a new five-year contract, said Roxanne Bieler, the ATA president and a high school English teacher.

The union last month declared an impasse, and will seek an outside mediator to help resolve the issues. Bieler said the ATA and district have been negotiating for the past 18 months.

Edwards said the district hasn’t received written notice of an impasse. He declined to comment publicly until receiving a formal notice.

The Board of Education meet this morning for its annual reorganizational meeting, when it picks the board leadership, swears in new members, appoints officials and makes other designations.

About a dozen ATA members were at the meeting, wearing black T-shirts that said: “ATA – It’s a beautiful day to demand fair pay” and “ATA – Union Strong.”

Bieler said the main issues are how to fairly compensate teachers for an additional school days and more time in the classroom.

Teachers currently work 185 days. Bieler said the district would like to add more to the schedule.

The ATA also wants to see more of school resources spent on educating children, from new textbooks in the elementary school to better compensation for teacher aides.

One ATA member, Chris Keller, noted the district has been cited by the state comptroller’s office to whittle down its reserves. A comptroller’s audit from 2022 said Albion’s fund balances were far in excess – by $17 million – of the statutory limit for a school district.

Keller said the fund balances have grown partly because the district is not properly funding the education for the children in the district.

The Board of Education sets a budget and underspends by several millions of dollars, depriving children of much-needed resources, he said.

The district’s budget for 2026-27 totals $45,615,036. Albion for the 18th time in the past 20 years did not increase property taxes. The tax levy stayed at $8,449,039, which is $359,906 under the district’s tax cap.