OKLAHOMA CITY - The state Capitol in
Kentucky filled with teachers protesting pension changes and demanding
generous school funding Monday, and thousands of Oklahoma educators
walked out of classrooms in two separate teacher strikes across nation.
Many Oklahoma schools were closed Monday, and districts announced plans
to stay shut into Tuesday with teacher demonstrations expected to last a
second day.
Oklahoma Gov. Mary Fallin signed legislation last week granting teachers
pay raises of about $6,100, or 15 to 18 percent. But some educators —
who haven’t seen a pay increase in 10 years — say that isn’t good enough
and walked out.
The state’s largest teachers union has demanded a $10,000 pay raise for
educators over three years, $5,000 for support personnel and a $75
million increase in funding this year.
“If I didn’t have a second job, I’d be on food stamps,” said Rae
Lovelace, a single mom and a third-grade teacher at Leedey Public
Schools in northwest Oklahoma. Lovelace, among many teachers who
moonlight for extra pay , works 30 to 40 hours a week at a second job
teaching online courses for a charter school.
Fallin on Monday praised the Oklahoma’s GOP-led Legislature’s
achievement in approving part of what teacher’s want.
“Significant revenue-raising measures were approved to make this pay
raise and additional school funding possible,” the Republican said in a
statement. “We must be responsible not to neglect other areas of need in
the state such as corrections and health and human services as we
continue to consider additional education funding measures.
But Democratic lawmaker Collin Walke said teachers should keep up the
pressure. Two separate bills pending in the Legislature to expand tribal
gambling and eliminate the income tax deduction for capital gains could
generate more than $100 million in additional funding each year.
“I think the Republican strategy is to wait the teachers out,” Walke
said.
Oklahoma ranks 47th among states and the District of Columbia in public
school revenue per student while its average teacher salary of $45,276
ranked 49th before the latest raises, according to the most recent
statistics from the National Education Association.
The demonstrations were inspired by West Virginia, where teachers walked
out for nine days earlier this year and won a 5 percent increase in pay.
Teachers in Arizona are now considering a strike over their demands for
a 20 percent salary increase. Many Arizona teachers wore red clothes to
school Monday in solidarity with protests in Oklahoma and Kentucky, said
Joe Thomas, president of the Arizona Education Association.
National Education Association President Lily Eskelsen Garcia spoke to
thousands during the rally in Oklahoma, saying lawmakers need to do
more.
“We are through correcting their mistakes.”
In Frankfort, Kentucky, teachers and other school employees chanted
“Stop the war on public education.”
“We’re madder than hornets, and the hornets are swarming today,” said
Claudette Green, a retired teacher and principal.
Schools across Kentucky were closed, due either to spring break or to
allow teachers and other school employees to attend the rally.
Amid a chorus of chants from teachers rallying in the Capitol, Kentucky
lawmakers considered a new state budget that includes higher spending
for public education.
Budget negotiators unveiled a spending plan Monday that includes
increased spending for the main funding formula for K-12 schools and
restored money for school buses that the state’s Republican governor had
proposed eliminating.
The additional education spending would be paid for by a 6 percent sales
tax on a host of services that had previously been tax-free. The
spending and taxing proposals cleared the Senate on Monday and went to
the House, which was expected to vote on the measures later Monday.
Language arts teacher Lesley Buckner was reluctant to give lawmakers
much credit.
“We’re sending a message,” she said. “If we continue to stay united,
they cannot turn away from us, they cannot turn their backs on us.”
The rally happened after hundreds of teachers called in sick Friday to
protest last-minute changes to their pension system. Teachers have
rallied several times during Kentucky’s legislative session to protest
the pension bill, but Monday was by far their biggest event.
Republican lawmakers in Kentucky passed a pension overhaul Thursday that
preserves benefits for most workers but cuts them for new teachers. The
move was done in response to chronic underfunding of the state’s teacher
retirement system and in defiance of a powerful teachers union that
vowed political retribution. Opponents objected that the pension changes
were inserted into an unrelated bill without a chance for public input,
and worry that the changes will discourage young people from joining the
profession.
Republican Gov. Matt Bevin has not yet signed the bill, but last week
tweeted his support, saying public workers owe “a deep debt of
gratitude” to lawmakers who voted to pass it.
During Monday’s rally, some teachers, angry at lawmakers who supported
the bill, chanted “Vote them out.”
Melissa Wash, a first-grade teacher form Gallatin County who has been
teaching for 19 years, said she voted for Bevin, but now plans to become
a Democrat. To the lawmakers who voted for the pension overhaul, she
said: “You better not count on another year in office.” |
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