
District makes updated offer to the teacher’s union during Wednesday negotiations; one more session scheduled Thursday prior to deadline
Ridgefield Education Association (REA) has voted to authorize a strike beginning Friday (Sept. 9). Its contract expired Aug. 31, which was also its first student day of the 2022-2023 school year.
The Ridgefield School District and REA each announced that one more negotiating session will take place Thursday before the teachers’ deadline Friday.
“After 6+ hours, we did not reach a TA tonight,’’ read a post on the REA Facebook page late Wednesday. “But agreed to one last bargaining session tomorrow at 4:30 p.m. before a potential strike Friday. In solidarity, the REA bargaining team.’’
The Ridgefield School District and the REA have been negotiating for several months, exchanging many proposals in an attempt to resolve a successor collective bargaining agreement. The district and REA met in a bargaining session on Wednesday (Sept. 7).
The next bargaining session is scheduled for Thursday (Sept. 8) at 4:30 p.m. The district is hopeful to reach a resolution. Should an agreement not be reached, the district will keep the community informed of the status of negotiations.
“We want our community to be aware of the current status of bargaining. You can review the district’s proposals and a summary on our Bargaining Updates page at www.ridgefieldsd.org/page/bargaining-update,’’ stated a release from the district late Wednesday night. “Please note that the most recent district proposal posted online includes portions of the REA’s most recent proposal within the document.’’
The district’s offer includes a minimum 8.5 percent wage increase in overall compensation to all employees for the current 2022-23 school year; a minimum 4.5 percent wage increase for the next school year (2023-24); and a minimum 3 percent wage increase for the following school year (2024-25). Additionally, eligible employees will receive an annual 2.5 percent step increase until reaching the top of the salary scale.
Additionally, the district has a 20-year salary scale with each year of service equating to one step. Each step is valued at 2.5 percent more than the previous step. For school year 2023-2024, the district will adjust to a 19-year scale by removing the first step, resulting in all employees on the salary scale moving up by one step, for an additional 2.5 percent increase (unless already maximized on the salary scale).
Similarly, for school year 2024-2025, the district will adjust to an 18-year scale by again removing the first step, resulting in all employees on the salary scale moving up by one step, for an additional 2.5 percent increase (unless already maximized on the salary scale).
The district’s proposal represents an approximate 3-year compensation package of at least 16 percent with eligible employees seeing up to 28.5 percent increases. Funding for these proposals includes additional state revenue of 5.5 percent (the value of the State of Washington’s Implicit Price Deflator Index, or IPD) this year and projected increases of 2.0 percent and 2.1 percent in the following years.
Information provided by Ridgefield School District.
Also read:
- Vancouver Fire Department mourns the off-duty passing of firefighter paramedic Jeremiah FrenzThe Vancouver Fire Department announced the off-duty death of Firefighter Paramedic Jeremiah Frenz, who served the community from Fire Station 5 and joined the department in 2020.
- C-TRAN Board makes thought-provoking choice for vice chair, voting Wil FuentesThe C-TRAN Board of Directors voted Wil Fuentes as vice chair for 2026, a move questioned by former board member Michelle Belkot amid ongoing litigation over her removal.
- Opinion: Kindness is always welcome, even in places where one does not always find itPaul Valencia reflects on how a brief moment of kindness between a journalist and a football coach underscores the importance of respect in journalism and public life.
- Opinion: Crossing the mighty Columbia River is getting mighty expensiveAn opinion column argues lawmakers must reassess the I-5 Columbia River Bridge replacement after revised estimates show the project’s probable cost has more than doubled.
- WAGOP, journalist file injunction against WA state to stop deleting public recordsThe Washington State Republican Party and journalist Jonathan Choe filed an injunction seeking to prevent the state from removing public records tied to publicly funded child care centers.
- Clark County District Court announces relocation to new facilityClark County District Court will begin operations at its new downtown Vancouver location on Feb. 2, 2026, as part of a move to improve public access and court services.
- Plan for lane closure on southbound I-205 for guardrail repair work Jan. 13WSDOT crews will close the left lane of southbound I-205 near the Northeast 18th Street overpass from 10 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. Jan. 13 for guardrail repairs.








