San Francisco teachers go on strike, closing schools for nearly 50,000 students

San Francisco Public Schools Shut Down as Teachers Strike Over Pay and Healthcare

San Francisco public schools shut down on Monday as teachers went on strike demanding improved healthcare benefits and pay raises, leaving families of some 50,000 students scrambling for child care and meals.

Members of the United Educators of San Francisco walked off the job for the first time since 1979 after union leaders and the San Francisco Unified School District (SFUSD) failed to reach an agreement during a weekend bargaining session.

San Francisco Mayor Daniel Lurie had pleaded with both sides to keep schools open for three more days while negotiations continued, aiming to “allow kids to stay in the classroom and the adults to keep talking.” Bargaining resumed Monday afternoon, according to a union spokesperson, but there was no set end date for the strike.

The district announced schools would also be closed on Tuesday and urged parents to check the district website “for learning, food, childcare, and district support resources.”

### The Cost of Living and Healthcare Drive Union Demands

In one of the nation’s most expensive cities, “the affordability crisis for those of us devoted to San Francisco’s next generation is real,” said Cassondra Curiel, the teachers’ union president, in a statement.

Curiel added that rising healthcare premiums “are pushing excellent teachers and support staff out of our district,” which currently has hundreds of educator vacancies. “This week, we said enough is enough,” she declared.

On Monday, at school sites across the city, picketing educators marched while rattling cowbells, beating drums, and holding signs reading: “On Strike for Safe and Stable Schools” and “We Can’t Wait / Invest in the Schools Our Students Deserve.”

### Impact on Students and Families

SFUSD Superintendent Maria Su spoke to reporters Monday, emphasizing the strike’s consequences. “Every day this strike continues has real consequences,” she said during a news conference. “Students are losing instructional time. Families are scrambling to take care of their children, to arrange child care.”

She also highlighted concerns for vulnerable students who are losing access to food, mental health support, and connections to their school community, their friends, and trusted educators.

### Labor Unrest in California Education

The San Francisco teachers’ strike may signal more labor unrest in California. Educators in other major districts, including Los Angeles, have indicated readiness to strike for higher pay, smaller class sizes, and more resources.

Last month, members of United Teachers Los Angeles voted overwhelmingly to authorize their leadership to call a strike, increasing pressure amid stalled negotiations and looming staff layoffs and budget cuts in the Los Angeles Unified School District.

Similarly, the San Diego teachers’ union voted prior to winter break to authorize a one-day unfair labor practice strike on February 26 if the San Diego Unified School District does not improve special education staffing.

These labor tensions come as COVID relief funds have ended and public school enrollment in California has plummeted in recent years, leading to reduced state funding. Last year, the California Teachers Association launched the “We Can’t Wait” campaign, encouraging union chapters to unite more forcefully in labor negotiations.

### SFUSD’s Budget Struggles

The San Francisco school district has cited “long-term budget challenges made worse by having fewer students and temporary COVID relief funds that are now gone.”

Several prominent lawmakers, including U.S. Rep. Nancy Pelosi (D-San Francisco) and State Senator Scott Wiener (D-San Francisco), joined Mayor Lurie in calling for a 72-hour pause before the strike commenced, urging union leaders to keep classrooms open.

However, the union stressed that its timeline had been clear for some time. A union spokesperson told The Times that “these are not strike-happy people,” noting it had been nearly 50 years since the last San Francisco teachers’ strike, which lasted over six weeks.

SFUSD is currently facing a $102-million budget deficit and remains under state fiscal oversight due to a long-standing financial crisis. The district has stated that if layoffs become necessary to close the budget gap, employees will receive notices this spring.

Superintendent Su affirmed, “We will be at the table and we will stay for as long as it takes to get to a full agreement. I do not want a prolonged strike.”

### What Teachers Are Demanding

Negotiations between the teachers’ union and the district began in March 2025. The union has requested a 9% pay raise over two years, suggesting that funds could come from reserve resources.

On Saturday, the district offered a 6% raise over two years.

Rising healthcare costs for teachers with families remain a major sticking point. According to the union, SFUSD educators receive some of the lowest contributions toward healthcare costs compared to neighboring districts, prompting many to seek employment elsewhere.

Family healthcare premiums have reportedly risen to $1,500 a month, which the union notes can represent up to 40% of the annual income for some of the lowest-earning classroom support staff.

### Voices from the Classroom

Teanna Tillery, union vice president and representative of paraeducators who often work part-time with individual students, described the challenges. Increasing healthcare costs and the Bay Area’s high cost of living have largely offset the $9,000 permanent salary gains their union negotiated two years ago.

“We’re having to commute to other cities because we just can’t afford to be here,” Tillery said. “Most of us work more than one job to make ends meet, and one job should definitely be enough for all educators.”

Tillery shared that for part-time educators with one dependent, healthcare premiums reach about $900 a month—equivalent to 40% of their biweekly pay. For classified employees with two or more dependents, premiums can be as high as $1,500 monthly, significantly impacting paychecks for those not working full-time.

The union is demanding that the district cover all or the lion’s share of medical premiums for members and their dependents.

### District’s Healthcare Proposal

The Associated Press reported that Superintendent Su said the district has proposed two options: pay 75% of family health coverage directly to Kaiser Permanente or offer an annual $24,000 allowance for teachers to select their own healthcare plans.

### Additional Agreements and Rally Calls

On Saturday, the district and union reached a tentative agreement on a sanctuary school policy. This mirrors the city’s own policy and aims to protect immigrant and refugee students.

At a Monday rally at Mission High School, Cindy Castillo, a social studies and ethnic studies teacher and SFUSD alum, called for full accommodations for students with special needs, retention of students and educators of color, and fully staffed campus security teams to prevent violence.

“In my classroom, we talk about how we make change for the common good,” Castillo said. “I am standing here to walk the talk.”

As negotiations continue, the eyes of educators, families, and policymakers throughout California remain fixed on San Francisco, awaiting resolution and the reopening of classrooms.
https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2026-02-09/san-francisco-teachers-strike

Atos annonce la disponibilité d’Autonomous Data & AI Engineer, une solution d’IA agentique sur Microsoft Azure, optimisée par la plateforme Atos Polaris AI

Les solutions d’IA agentique seront en démonstration sur le stand d’Atos lors du salon Microsoft Ignite, qui se tiendra à San Francisco du 18 au 21 novembre Paris, France 18 novembre 2025 Atos, un leader mondial de la transformation digitale accélérée par l’IA et partenaire Microsoft Frontier pour les technologies d’IA, annonce aujourd’hui la disponibilité d’une solution d’IA agentique, Autonomous Data and AI Engineer, conçue pour augmenter les capacités et la vitesse des équipes d’ingénierie des données et de l’IA. Cette solution s’appuie sur la plateforme Atos Polaris AI lancée plus tôt cette année et aujourd’hui intégrée aux fonctionnalités avancées du cloud et de l’IA d’Azure, permettant l’implémentation de systèmes complets d’agents d’IA travaillant de manière autonome pour orchestrer des flux de travail complexes. Fondée sur les principes d’IA responsable de Microsoft, cette solution agentique est conçue pour gérer et automatiser des tâches d’ingénierie IA basées sur des données complexes nécessitant plusieurs étapes de traitement dans le cadre de processus métiers applicables à tout secteur. Elles est actuellement disponible pour Azure Databricks et Snowflake sur Azure, deux plateformes de données cloud de premier plan disponibles sur Microsoft Azure. Autonomous Data and AI Engineer peut intégrer, traiter et interagir de manière autonome avec des données structurées et non structurées. Après avoir chargé des fichiers à partir de plateformes de données externes, les agents appliquent des règles de qualité et de transformation des données afin de créer des visualisations de données servant de base à la prise de décision humaine. Une fois que les tâches typiques d’ingénierie des données sont exécutées avec succès, les spécialistes peuvent utiliser des agents IA et de visualisation supplémentaires pour interroger facilement les données et obtenir des informations exploitables. Les experts métiers techniques et non techniques peuvent utiliser le Atos Polaris AI Agent Studio no-code intégré pour associer et orchestrer plusieurs agents, les connecter à des LLMs (grands modèles de langage), à divers outils et autres agents à l’aide de normes ouvertes telles que les protocoles MCP (Model Context Protocol) et A2A (Agent-to-Agent). La solution d’IA agentique d’Atos réduit les efforts manuels, et accélère le développement et le déploiement des opérations de données d’environ 60 %. Elle accélère la mise sur le marché en réduisant la dépendance vis-à-vis des équipes centrales d’experts dans la génération d’informations à partir de nouvelles sources de données. La solution réduit également les coûts opérationnels jusqu’à 35 % en s’appuyant sur des agents DataOps qui permettent de réduire le temps moyen de traitement des tickets. Les entreprises peuvent donc s’adapter rapidement à l’évolution des sources de données, aux priorités changeantes et aux exigences de conformité, tout en libérant des capacités de R&D et d’innovation. Notre nouvelle solution agentique permet d’adopter le paradigme des « Service-as-Software » en exploitant l’IA pour gérer des tâches complexes à étapes multiples d’ingénierie de données », a déclaré Narendra Naidu, responsable mondial des données et de l’IA chez Atos. Depuis plus de 20 ans, Atos et Microsoft collaborent pour offrir des services cloud flexibles qui optimisent les ressources, rationalisent les processus et prennent en charge les centres de données mondiaux. Avec l’introduction de la plateforme Atos Polaris AI sur Microsoft Azure, les deux entreprises fournissent une fois encore des solutions de bout en bout à leurs clients pour les appuyer dans leur parcours de transformation numérique. La plateforme d’IA d’Atos Polaris sera en démonstration lors du salon Microsoft Ignite, qui se tiendra au Moscone Center, à San Francisco, du 18 au 21 novembre. Découvrez l’engagement d’Atos pour l’innovation et la croissance grâce aux données et à l’IA, la plateforme Atos Polaris AI, ainsi que nos solutions d’IA et de cloud de bout en bout et bien plus encore sur notre stand numéro 4335. *** À propos d’Atos Group Atos Group est un leader international de la transformation digitale avec près de 67 000 collaborateurs et un chiffre d’affaires annuel de près de 10 milliards d’euros. Présent commercialement dans 61 pays, il exerce ses activités sous deux marques : Atos pour les services et Eviden pour les produits. Numéro un européen de la cybersécurité, du cloud et des supercalculateurs, Atos Group s’engage pour un avenir sécurisé et décarboné. Il propose des solutions sur mesure et intégrées, accélérées par l’IA, pour tous les secteurs d’activité. Atos Group est la marque sous laquelle Atos SE (Societas Europaea) exerce ses activités. Atos SE est cotée sur Euronext Paris. La raison d’être d’Atos Group est de contribuer à façonner l’espace informationnel. Avec ses compétences et ses services, le Groupe supporte le développement de la connaissance, de l’éducation et de la recherche dans une approche pluriculturelle et contribue au développement de l’excellence scientifique et technologique. Partout dans le monde, le Groupe permet à ses clients et à ses collaborateurs, et plus généralement au plus grand nombre, de vivre, travailler et progresser durablement et en toute confiance dans l’espace informationnel. Contact presse : Laurent Massicot laurent. massicot@atos. net Pièce jointe CP Global Atos annonce la disponibilité d’Autonomous Data & AI Engineer, une solution d’IA agentique sur Microsoft Azure.
https://www.globenewswire.com/news-release/2025/11/19/3190623/0/fr/Atos-annonce-la-disponibilit%C3%A9-d-Autonomous-Data-AI-Engineer-une-solution-d-IA-agentique-sur-Microsoft-Azure-optimis%C3%A9e-par-la-plateforme-Atos-Polaris-AI.html

49ers blow out Cardinals, 41-22

During a late Sunday afternoon window featuring three exciting football games, the San Francisco 49ers and Arizona Cardinals delivered a surprisingly dull matchup. The 49ers jumped out to a quick 13-0 lead within the first five minutes and never looked back, ultimately winning 41-22.

San Francisco quarterback Brock Purdy, finally healthy after missing most of the season, put on an impressive performance. He completed 19 of 26 passes for 200 yards, throwing three touchdowns and no interceptions. Two of those touchdown passes were caught by tight end George Kittle, while running back Christian McCaffrey snagged the other. McCaffrey also contributed heavily on the ground, rushing for 81 yards and scoring two additional touchdowns.

On the other side, Arizona quarterback Jacoby Brissett set an NFL record with an astonishing 47 completions—the most ever in a regular-season game. His final stat line was 47-for-57 for 452 yards, with two touchdowns and two interceptions. However, much of Brissett’s production came during garbage time after the Cardinals fell behind 35-10 in the third quarter.

With this win, the 49ers improve to 7-4, solidifying their position in the NFC playoff race. Meanwhile, the Cardinals drop to 3-7 and look poised to face more challenging “garbage time” scenarios as the season progresses.
https://www.nbcsports.com/nfl/profootballtalk/rumor-mill/news/49ers-blow-out-cardinals-41-22

Kurtenbach: The ‘urgent’ 49ers passed a key test against the Giants with ruthless execution

Sunday’s 49ers win over the Giants shouldn’t be considered a significant accomplishment. This was hardly a seismic victory that proves San Francisco is destined for postseason glory and is poised to play in a Super Bowl the Bay is hosting come February.

No, Sunday’s win was merely the Niners doing what every playoff-worthy outfit should do when facing a pathetic, bottom-feeding opponent: take its lunch money and walk away.

Make no mistake about it: Sunday’s 34-24 win in the swamps of New Jersey against the New York Giants was the ultimate referendum on the 49ers’ season. Why? Because the Giants are a disaster. Tactically, philosophically, and politically, that franchise is a mess.

They have a rookie quarterback, a receiver room that looks like a community college roster, an underperforming defensive line, and a secondary that couldn’t stop a grandma with a walker. If the 49ers, even with their prodigious, perpetually growing injury list, failed to handle this business, the whole season was over. Finished. They don’t even make flags that red.

But the Niners did handle business, controlling every aspect of this eminently forgettable game. Special teams had flash plays, the defense played better than its personnel would have suggested, and the offense was a machine of efficiency. The Niners passed the test with ease. Literally.

Quarterback Mac Jones was perfect in the first half Sunday, completing 14-of-14 for 143 yards and two touchdowns. It was a ruthlessly executed start that provided the Niners the upper hand in the second half, despite some defensive woes. It also established a blueprint for how the Niners can continue to win games despite what is clearly a curse or some paranormal phenomenon that has left the Niners as the league’s most-injured team yet again.

Because here is the brutal, undeniable truth: The dreams of the 49ers playing a Super Bowl at home are out of reach. Nobody can suspend enough disbelief to say a team without Fred Warner and Nick Bosa is going to win multiple playoff games against the elites. It’s an impossibility.

But this squad still has every reason to expect to be playing on the second weekend in January, provided they adhere to the single, most basic, most unglamorous blueprint they have left: They must be a run-first team.

The Niners are playing with off-the-street free agents, rookies, and dollar-store pickups up and down their defensive line, and they might be adding a few more before Tuesday’s NFL trade deadline, particularly after rookie defensive tackle Mykel Williams’ knee injury, suffered in the fourth quarter Sunday.

Pair a line that is last in the NFL in pressure rate with a secondary that has shown clear breakdowns in both communication and coverage all season — Sunday’s game being no exception — and the Niners know they have to score roughly 30 points per game to win moving forward.

Moreso, they’ll have to do it with the ground game leading the way.

We saw what happened in Houston last week, when the Niners fell behind early and abandoned the run; a bad situation became worse. Control the ball by running the ball, and that brings a time-of-possession advantage and typically cleaner windows in which to throw the ball.

None of this is advanced-level football theory. In fact, it might be considered elementary. But this Niners team is in no position to reinvent modern offense. Elementary will do for now.

Sunday, it worked quite well.

On the fourth-quarter drive that gave San Francisco a 27-10 lead, the Niners threw the ball on first down, gained 13 yards, and then didn’t throw the ball again. Eight straight runs, 63 yards, complete domination.

Shanahan was practically giggling about it postgame: “It’s very fun. It’s awesome,” Shanahan said of the drive. “It’s so tempting the whole time you’re like ‘man, can you do it again and get away with it? Maybe we should do a play action or something off of it. No, screw it, we’ll just keep running it.’”

“The guys came through, and that’s one of the most enjoyable drives you can go on. All run plays.”

So expect McCaffrey to touch the ball 33 times, like he did Sunday, every game from this point onwards. Brian Robinson, McCaffrey’s backup, is going to have a role in this offense, too. He ran the ball five times for 53 yards and a touchdown Sunday.

The Niners’ offensive line is going to have to continue to find ways to merge gap and zone blocking — they’ve done a great job of that in two of the last three weeks.

And whichever quarterback is under the center — be that backup Mac Jones, who started his seventh game Sunday, or Brock Purdy, whose return is considered imminent (next week or the following), as he recovers from a turf-toe injury — needs to be precise and timely with their throws, like Jones was on Sunday.

“This is a big one for us. You really have to look at this game like a playoff game, almost,” Jones said. “We definitely answered the bell.”

“This team’s pretty urgent right now,” McCaffrey, the team’s bellcow back, said. “It’s been good to come back from losses with big wins.”

The Niners’ dreams of playing in the Super Bowl at their home field might be out of reach given the battered and bruised state of their roster. No one can suspend enough disbelief to say a team without Fred Warner and Nick Bosa is going to win multiple playoff games.

But Sunday was a reminder that this squad has a long way to go before reaching rock-bottom. And if this team can keep carrying the rock, they have every reason to believe — or rather expect — to be playing in real playoff games, not just ones imagined.
https://www.mercurynews.com/2025/11/02/kurtenbach-the-urgent-49ers-passed-a-key-test-against-the-giants-with-ruthless-execution/

4.3 magnitude earthquake jolts San Francisco area

An earthquake with a magnitude of 4.3 shook the San Francisco area early Monday, according to the United States Geological Survey (USGS). The earthquake occurred just east-southeast of Berkeley and happened shortly before 3 a.m. PDT.

Many people reported feeling a sharp shake and receiving phone alerts about the event. It is not yet known if there were any injuries or significant damage caused by the earthquake.

This story has been sourced from a third-party syndicated feed. Mid-day accepts no responsibility or liability for the dependability, trustworthiness, reliability, or accuracy of the content. Mid-day management and mid-day.com reserve the sole right to alter, delete, or remove content at their absolute discretion and without prior notice for any reason whatsoever.

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https://www.mid-day.com/news/world-news/article/united-states-news-4-3-magnitude-earthquake-jolts-san-francisco-area-many-people-report-sharp-shake-23595253

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