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Join UTNO Today!

Join Your Union Today!

Together educators and school staff across New Orleans are coming together to build the schools our students deserve.  You can join today with your co-workers in building that effort.  

Membership in UTNO is open to eligible employees of public schools, private schools, parochial schools, or education-related private/non-profit organizations in Orleans Parish. Persons who occupy the position of principal, assistant principals, central office administrators, or those who are engaged in the hiring or firing of employees shall not be eligible to hold membership in this organization. This General Membership application is for those who wish to join UTNO and do not work in a position covered by a collective bargaining agreement or at NOLA Public Schools directly. 

If you work in a position covered by a collective bargaining agreement at Morris Jeff Community School, Benjamin Franklin High School, or Bricolage Academy, please talk to the union leaders in your school about joining your chapter of UTNO.  If you work for NOLA Public Schools please contact the UTNO office for information on how to join. 

Are you interested in learning more about UTNO? If so, complete this form and someone will get back to you soon to answer your questions. We look forward to hearing from you.

New Orleans Moves to Virtual Learning After Outcry from Teachers and Parents

January 4th, 2021- Today New Orleans Public Schools announced that all schools should move to virtual-only learning by Thursday of this week. 

 

This is an important policy change that will help protect the health and safety of students, teachers, and all New Orleans residents who interact with those in our schools. Less than a week ago, the district had decided to insist upon in-person learning, but this caused an outcry from concerned educators, parents and students. The United Teachers of New Orleans published an Open Letter to the Superintendent and School Board outlining these concerns on January 1st, and in the subsequent days, several individual schools determined that they could not safely resume in-person learning at this time and decided to transition once again to virtual learning. MORE


 

Dr. Lewis and members of the Orleans Parish School Board,

 

We can see the light at the end of the tunnel with the distribution of the vaccine, but we cannot act with reckless abandon in the face of a rapidly spreading virus.

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Local 527 membership elected Mr. LaCour vice-president in 1969 and then president in 1971, a post he held until he was promoted to a position in the American Federation of Teachers in 1998. He transformed Local 527 from a relatively small group of mostly segregated teachers into the largest local in the state. In 1972, amidst top-down faculty desegregation, Mr. LaCour helped orchestrate a merger with the mostly-white NEA local to form UTNO: The United Teachers of New Orleans. The merger was unprecedented:


In Mr. LaCour’s words: “I think UTNO was really the first institution in New Orleans to

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October, 2020

United Teachers of Franklin stands in full support of Franklin’s on going commitment to Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion. These values lie at the heart of our organization:

  • ➢ We support diversity, as it embodies our mission to fight all forms of bias in education.
  • ➢ We support equity, as it forms the foundation of our collective, democratic process.
  • ➢ We support inclusion—not only because we are a union, but because we are teachers.

We work hard every day to create environments for students to thrive. If we are not fighting for students to express their authentic identities in the

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As students begin to return to schools virtually during the pandemic the United Teachers of New Orleans is collaborating with First Grace United Methodist Church on re:Purpose a program to facilitate the repair and donation of computers to students of Orleans Parish Public Schools. 

Schools across New Orleans as well as NOLA Public Schools have invested in purchasing computers for students to access virtual learning. The goal for schools and for NOLA Public Schools is to have one device for each student in order to facilitate successful virtual learning, but at the city council meeting Monday

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