Houston Chronicle

Teachers drive surge in worker protests

- By Andrew Van Dam

About 485,200 workers were involved in major work stoppages in 2018, new Labor Department data show. It’s the highest figure since 1986, and a striking trend.

The labor unrest wasn’t a result of prominent unions in manufactur­ing, such as United Automobile Workers, or transporta­tion, such as Teamsters. It was driven by a wave of teacher strikes that spread from West Virginia (35,000 workers) to Oklahoma (45,000) and Kentucky (26,000). Within months, 267,000 more teachers in Arizona, Colorado and North Carolina staged walkouts.

The 2018 teacher-strike tsunami was decades in the making. State budget cuts, especially after the Great Recession, squeezed school spending and teacher salaries.

Until the mid 1990s, teachers were paid almost as much as other educated workers, according to the Economic Policy Institute’s analysis of Labor Department data. As of 2017, the most recent year for which data are available, they were paid an average of 18.7 percent less. Their 7.6 percent advantage in benefits does not close the gap.

“Not only had teacher pay declined since the late 1990s, class sizes had grown larger. The working conditions for teachers and the learning conditions for students had declined really radically,” said Julie Greene, a historian at the University of Maryland.

State budget cuts have been particular­ly harsh in Oklahoma, where the general-fund allocation for schools decreased by 28.2 percent in the decade ending in the 2018 fiscal year, according to the Center for Budget and Policy Priorities.

The damage caused by funding shortfalls extends beyond teacher pay. The state has 54,000 more students than it did in 2008-09, said Rebecca Fine, an education specialist at the Oklahoma Policy Institute, yet the number of aides, secretarie­s, plumbers and other support staff has fallen by 391. The state also offers fewer fine arts and music classes than it did four years ago, Fine writes.

Organizers and advocates began campaignin­g years before strikes brought their struggles into the headlines. They were inspired by events like the Chicago teachers’ strike of 2012, where demonstrat­ors won major concession­s by framing their demands as part of a social and community movement aimed at improving the lives of students, Greene said.

“They were arguing that it wasn’t just about their own pay,” she said. “They were arguing about the need to confront the austerity measures pushed by mayors Richard Daley and Rahm Emanuel.”

Parents and teachers created legislativ­e action committees and social-media groups. In 2014, a reported 25,000 people rallied in Oklahoma City in support of increased school funding. Such rallies soon became common.

Only about a third of Oklahoma teachers are union members, Labor Department data show. The unions formed the bedrock of the walkout effort, Fine said, but organizers drew in additional support through community associatio­ns and Facebook groups.

The teachers’ movement grew along with the idea that politician­s could be swayed by mass actions such as those staged by the tea party and Occupy groups,said Deana Rohlinger, a sociologis­t at Florida State University. “Social movements realized that they can leverage new technology and get people out into the streets in their own communitie­s,” she said.

When West Virginia teachers walked out in February 2018, they “helped tip the scales and reminded Oklahoma teachers that collective action was possible,” Fine said.

Within months, teachers in at least five states, including the four where teachers’ pay lagged farthest behind that of other educated workers — had followed suit.

“One struggle builds on another one and you’ve got a labor movement flowering,” she said.

“Teachers do not need to develop new strategies whole cloth,” Rohlinger said. “They can connect with teachers who’ve been successful in other states and adapt tactics to their communitie­s.”

It’s a return to prominence for a profession that took the lead in the late 1960s and ‘70s, when educators fought for basic bargaining rights and, later, against budget cuts stemming from an economic downturn, said Jon Shelton a historian at the University of Wisconsin at Green Bay and author of “Teacher Strike! Public Education and the Making of a New American Political Order.”

He ranked the 2018 strikes among the most important labor victories in more than a century.

“Perhaps the only time in history we’ve seen things of quite that magnitude was in the late nineteenth century when you had spontaneou­s revolts of workingcla­ss people,” Shelton said.

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