The union for teachers in Vermont has lost a seat on the board of a health insurance pool for educators.

The membership of the Vermont Education Health Initiative voted on Oct. 21 to replace the president of the Vermont NEA with the director of the Vermont School Boards Association.

VEHIโ€™s five-person board is made up of representatives from four areas: one seat goes to a superintendent of schools, one seat is for a school business manager, one is for a school board member, and two had been set aside for the unionโ€™s leadership.

Laura Soares, who is president and CEO of VEHI, said she received a petition in late August signed by 118 school boards requesting a change to the bylaws. She said the Vermont NEA is an advocacy organization and is working on behalf of union members and school employees.

They felt that the school boards should also have an advocate on the board to bring balance.

โ€œThis is about equity issues. This (agenda) item really illustrates that as an advocacy organization the NEA has two seats on a five member board and as a (school) board member I have no advocate representing me on the board. This will give us a seat at the table,โ€ said Neil Oโ€™Dell, chairman of the Norwich School Board, in support of the move.

Joel Cook, executive director of the NEA, and Martha Allen, president at Vermont NEA, had served on the board. Allenโ€™s seat came up for election this year.

She will be replaced by Nicole Mace, representing the School Board Association.

The change in the boardโ€™s structure comes as school boards across the state gear up to negotiate a record number of teacher contracts because of a looming deadline to move teachers on to new health care plans by January 2018.

In March, VEHI decided to make the most generous of the four new health care plans the default for teachers whose contracts werenโ€™t in place by January.

The decision significantly undermined school boardsโ€™ ability to negotiate the new terms, according to Rick Scott, chairman of the Addison Central Supervisory Union School Board, who spearheaded the campaign to change the structure of the board.

โ€œOne hundred and fifty people recognized there is an imbalance in how the board is structured,โ€ he said at the annual meeting of VEHI on Oct. 21.

โ€œIt became apparent the Vermont NEA had a disproportionate influence on the actions of the board,โ€ Scott said, adding that the change he was promoting was about stability, equity and balance. โ€œSchool boards pay a great portion of the costs of health care. It is my feeling that our advocacy organization should have equal place on the board representing the collective positions of the boards around the state.โ€