The Arizona Republic

SEEING RED

Thousands of Arizona teachers and their supporters join quiet protest as frustratio­n builds over low wages

- Ricardo Cano and Angel Mendoza

Arizona teachers wore red to school Wednesday in protest of what many described as the state’s lethargic response to a teacher crisis that’s driven thousands of qualified educators out of the classroom.

A group of Arizona teachers spontaneou­sly organized the #RedForEd grass-roots effort — which has spurred talks on social media of a possible strike — over the weekend.

Thousands of the state’s classroom teachers participat­ed. As of Wednesday afternoon, more than 20,000 people had joined Arizona Educators United, a closed Facebook page teachers created Sunday for the demonstrat­ion.

On social media, teachers, parents, supporters, school board members and administra­tors wrote notes of encouragem­ent and shared pictures of themselves draped in red and touting the hashtags #RedForEd and #AZWhatIsTh­ePlan.

“I hope that everybody realizes that teachers have legitimate power right

now, and we haven’t fully used it yet but we can,” said Noah Karvelis, one of the protest’s organizers and a music teacher at Tres Rios Service Academy in Tolleson.

Karvelis told The Arizona Republic

Wednesday that organizers would gather with the state teachers’ union to discuss further steps and acknowledg­ed that the possibilit­y of a strike is “on everyone’s minds.”

Amy Ball, a kindergart­en teacher in the Madison Elementary School District, participat­ed in Wednesday’s demonstrat­ion. She said teachers were frustrated that pay and working conditions have not significan­tly improved.

“School districts like mine and the teachers who work in them are forced to do more with less, and then act as if nothing is wrong,” Ball said. “Teacher working conditions are student learning conditions and if we don’t stand for children, then we don’t stand for much.”

While the effort appears to have galvanized thousands of teachers, the head of the state’s teachers’ union said he was unsure what would happen next.

Joe Thomas, president of the Arizona Education Associatio­n, said he has “not seen this many teachers this frustrated since I’ve been in Arizona.” He called on state leaders to significan­tly address the issue this legislativ­e session.

Republican Gov. Doug Ducey and the Republican-led Legislatur­e are currently in the midst of budget negotiatio­ns.

Thomas said teachers have “no confidence” that state leadership would take action, but he stopped short of encouragin­g a statewide teacher strike.

“A statewide action can take a lot of different forms. I think that with West Virginia, we paid attention once that happened,” he said. “But if you talk to any teacher in West Virginia, it’s months of discussion­s that lead to that frustratio­n.

“I’m not saying it won’t happen . ... What I am saying is I think today is about a positive statement of awareness that there are issues in our schools.”

Karvelis, an organizer of Arizona Educators United, said teachers in Arizona were galvanized by their colleagues in West Virginia.

Teachers there organized a nine-day strike across all 55 West Virginia school districts that was settled Tuesday after the state’s Legislatur­e committed to boosting their pay by 5 percent.

Arizona and West Virginia are among the states that pay their teachers the least. The median pay for Arizona elementary teachers was $42,474 in 2016, ranking 50th nationally according to the Arizona State University Morrison Institute for Public Policy.

Arizona’s education system has yet to fully recover from the cost-cutting measures imposed following the recession.

Experts and educators have said low pay, stressful working conditions and perceived lack of respect for the teaching profession are the main causes of the state’s current teacher landscape in which thousands of classroom positions either remain unfilled or staffed by people who are underquali­fied.

Organizers of Wednesday’s teacher protest described the effort as the “first step” in mobilizing teachers for further action, though did not explicitly say they planned to strike.

But that was the focus of discussion by hundreds of educators on the Arizona Educators United Facebook page and other social media. Comments indicated broad support for a strike, mixed with concern over what such action would mean for participan­ts’ jobs and teaching certificat­es.

In Arizona, teachers who participat­e in a statewide strike are at risk of losing their teaching credential­s and jobs.

If a statewide teacher strike were to occur in Arizona, it would likely require greater mobilizati­on efforts than West Virginia.

West Virginia consists of about 20,000 teachers in 55 school districts. Arizona is estimated to have about 60,000 active classroom teachers in more than 200 school districts and a public charter sector of 550 schools.

Resha Gentry-Ballance, president of the Classroom Teachers Associatio­n for the Phoenix Union High School District, said some teachers are pushing for more action.

“We’ve been letting our state legislator­s know how frustrated we are and I think my colleagues are concerned that doesn’t seem to be getting us anywhere,” Gentry-Ballance said.

She said a movement like a strike would need to come from the organic grass-roots movement.

“My colleagues are really, really frustrated. So could it lead to something like that? Maybe so,” she said. “But it would have to come from my colleagues and I … maybe we are getting to that place, I don’t know — we’ll have to see.”

Some people criticized the protest online for its perceived partisan tone that took aim against the state’s Republican leadership.

Others questioned the merits of educators’ grievances, saying their jobs give them time off during the summer and the profession overall is not one known for being high-paying.

Neither Ducey nor Arizona Senate or Republican leadership commented publicly about the #RedForEd protest Wednesday.

Sarah Richardson, a Chandler parent of three who is involved in Save Our Schools Arizona, said she was “absolutely blown away” by teachers’ and supporters’ response to Wednesday’s demonstrat­ion.

Richardson said she hoped a strike was not “the end result of this movement,” but would support teachers if they did.

“We’ve tried many things that haven’t worked,” Richardson said. “So at this point, if it comes to a strike, I stand behind our teachers 100 percent and I will absolutely support that decision.

“But I hope it does not come to that because it will be difficult for everyone in our state.”

 ?? NICK OZA/ THE REPUBLIC ?? Tres Rios Service Academy kindergart­en teacher Thalia Page (left) and teacher’s assistant Elizabeth Ramos wore red on Wednesday to highlight low pay and to urge the state to take action.
NICK OZA/ THE REPUBLIC Tres Rios Service Academy kindergart­en teacher Thalia Page (left) and teacher’s assistant Elizabeth Ramos wore red on Wednesday to highlight low pay and to urge the state to take action.
 ?? SEAN LOGAN/THE REPUBLIC ?? Amy Ball, a Madison Elementary School District kindergart­en teacher, speaks Wednesday.
SEAN LOGAN/THE REPUBLIC Amy Ball, a Madison Elementary School District kindergart­en teacher, speaks Wednesday.

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