WVA Teachers and Parents Ready to Hit Streets Again

West Virginia teachers and parents may have to hit the streets to defend their kidsagain. They already have twice this year.

That’s because the Republican-run state House will take up legislation on June 17 to boost charter schools and vouchers to parents of private school kids, outlaw public school teacher strikes, fire all public workersnot just teacherswho strike and withhold pay from strikers. The State Senate approved the bill on an 1815 party line vote on May 30.

“Charter schools, no! Public schools, yes!” the thousands of teachers who descended on the state capitol building in Charleston chanted in their latest protest.

GOP State Senate President "Mitch Carmichael and his ilk aren’t listening to West Virginians who have overwhelmingly, 88%, spoken out against charter schools and ESAs,” Nicole McCormick, the Montgomery County Education Association president and a teacher at Bluefield Middle School, told local media. ESAs are “education savings accounts,” a pseudonym for vouchers.

"So, my question is: who are they listening to? Certainly not West Virginians, absolutely not the experts, West Virginia educators. So I have to believe they are listening to ALEC, Betsy DeVos and their corporate donors,” she said.

DeVos is GOP President Donald Trump’s education secretary. She's a GOP big giver from Michigan who hates public schools, their teachers and unions. ALEC is a secret, corporate-funded right-wing lobby that imposes its “model” anti-worker legislation on states.

The West Virginia GOP’s legislation is in retaliation for the statewide teachers’ strike last year, which shut down every school in the state for nine working days.

The state forced that strike, in “right to work” West Virginia, by offering teachers a 1% raiseafter a decadelong freezeoffset by destruction of their pensions and huge increases in their health care premiums.

That strike, which drew tens of thousands of parents and students to Charleston in the dead of winter despite the Mountaineer State’s treacherous roads, forced solons to back down.

It also triggered a wave of similar forced teachers’ strikes in Arizona, Colorado, Kentucky, Los Angeles and Oklahoma, and even among charter school teachers in Chicago. In all those cases, lawmakers and governors forced teachers, parents and studentsoften with parents in the lead and all from the grass rootsto strike on behalf of better classroom conditions, up-to-date textbooks, better pay and better support staffing in the schools.

When West Virginia lawmakers schemed to enact givebacks this past February, another strike forced them to back down after nine hours. The GOP tried again in May, and the teachers and their allies surrounded the state capital again. That time, though, senators charged ahead with their so-called “Student Success Act.” Now the teachers plan to be back when the state House starts its session on June 17.

“I came with a group from the Northern Panhandle today because I believe that the only way that we will continue to lead the charge for protecting workers’ rights blocking harmful legislation is if workers mobilize,” Weir High School teacher Brendan Muckian-Bates said.

“Today’s protest was a strong show of force that proves once again that, no matter what bill Mitch and his cronies try to push through, education workers of West Virginia will show up to stop it,” he told local media.

West Virginia Education Association President Dale Lee told local media he thinks the state House of Delegates will take its time after the GOP speaker split the Student Success Act into four separate pieces and sent them to four committees.

“Speaker Hanshaw already said he’s going to break the components apart and look at each thing individually, which we’ve been saying...that’s what needs to happen. And I expect the House is going to listen to the public and West Virginians instead of outside interest groups,” Lee said.

“In West Virginia, educators who went on strike twice within a year are still fighting for sufficient funding, with broad public support,” said national AFT President Randi Weingarten.

She cited a state Education Department report, “West Virginia’s Voice,” which surveyed more than 20,000 West Virginians on their views on public education. 

“The report shows residents overwhelmingly favor increasing the number of school social workers, psychologists and counselors, providing funding to strengthen teachers’ skills in shortage areas such as math and raising pay for school employees,” Weingarten noted.

But legislature Republicans “instead are pushing legislation for charter schools and voucher-like education savings accounts for private and religious school tuition, even though West Virginia’s Voice found residents favor existing public schools and oppose school privatization due to concerns about “fraud, lack of accountability and concentration of benefits to higher-income families.” 

(PAI)