Albuquerque Journal

N.C. teachers demand better funding in large march

Thousands filled the main street in protest in Raleigh

- BY EMERY P. DALESIO AND GARY D. ROBERTSON

RALEIGH, N.C. — Thousands of teachers filled the main street of North Carolina’s capital Wednesday demanding better pay and more funding for public schools, hoping to achieve what other educators around the country accomplish­ed by pressuring lawmakers for change.

City blocks turned red, the color of shirts worn by marchers chanting “We care! We vote!” and “This is What Democracy Looks Like!” An estimated 19,000 people joined the march, according to the Downtown Raleigh Alliance, which based its number in part on aerial photos.

“I feel the current politician­s in charge of the state are anti-public education,” Raleigh high school teacher Bill Notarnicol­a said as he prepared a time-lapse photo of the march. “The funds are not keeping up with the growth. We are seeing cutback, after cutback, after cutback.”

Many teachers entered the Legislativ­e Building, continuing to chant as the Republican-controlled legislatur­e held short floor meetings to start its annual work session. Most teachers quieted down when asked, but a woman who yelled, “Education is a Right: That is why we have to fight,” was among four escorted from the Senate gallery. No arrests were made.

Democratic Gov. Roy Cooper spoke at a rally across the street, promoting his proposal to pay for higher salaries by blocking tax cuts that Republican­s decided to give corporatio­ns and high-income households next January. GOP leaders have flatly rejected his idea.

Cooper, who is working to eliminate the GOP’s veto-proof majorities in fall elections, urged teachers to ask lawmakers, “are you going to support even more tax cuts for corporatio­ns and the very wealthy, or are you going to support much better teacher pay and investment in our public schools?”

Previous strikes, walkouts and protests in West Virginia, Arizona, Kentucky, Colorado and Oklahoma led legislator­s in each state to improve pay, benefits or overall school funding. Wednesday’s march in North Carolina prompted more than three-dozen school districts that educate more than two-thirds of the state’s 1.5 million public school students to cancel class.

But these Republican leaders appear determined not to change course.

 ?? TRAVIS LONG/RALEIGH NEWS & OBSERVER ?? Thousands of teachers march on Fayettevil­le Street in Raleigh, N.C. on Wednesday to the N.C. Legislativ­e building.
TRAVIS LONG/RALEIGH NEWS & OBSERVER Thousands of teachers march on Fayettevil­le Street in Raleigh, N.C. on Wednesday to the N.C. Legislativ­e building.

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