The Arizona Republic

Ariz. educators will walk out Thursday

Teachers and other school employees vote to take action

- Ricardo Cano Arizona Republic USA TODAY NETWORK

Arizona educators and school employees fueling the teacher-led #RedForEd movement have voted in support of a walkout — an unpreceden­ted action aimed at pressuring state leaders to act on their demands for more education funding.

Leaders of the Arizona Educators United grass-roots group and the Arizona Education Associatio­n announced

the results of their walkout poll late Thursday.

“We are underfundi­ng our students,” said AEU organizer and teacher Noah Karvelis. “We are throwing away an entire generation of students’ opportunit­y of academic success.”

Karvelis said they will continue walkins Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday and then walk out Thursday. This will give schools and parents time to prepare, he said.

“My biggest concern in this moment is we can’t let the status quo continue,” Karvelis said. “The biggest disservice we could do to our students right now is not act.”

AEA President Joe Thomas said 78 percent of the 57,000 educators who voted supported a walkout.

Parents, teachers, school boards and superinten­dents have remained on edge in recent weeks as educators intensifie­d their discussion­s over whether to walk out of schools, as their colleagues have recently done in West Virginia and Oklahoma.

Gov. Doug Ducey commented on the news via Twitter: “No one wants to see teachers strike. If schools shut down, our kids are the ones who lose out. We have worked side by side with the education community to develop a sustainabl­e plan to give teachers a 20 percent raise by 2020. I am committed to getting teachers this raise and am working to get this passed at the Legislatur­e. We need teachers teaching, and kids learning.”

Public schools across the state have sent notices alerting parents that their schools could close down with little to no notice if educators choose to walk out.

Madison Elementary School District in north-central Phoenix told families to prepare for “suspended instructio­n, temporary teacher and classroom changes” or combined classrooms, depending on how many employees walk out.

Many school-district notices warned parents that they would close schools if they feel they don’t have enough employees to safely operate.

Thousands of Arizona educators and classified employees such as crossing guards and cafeteria workers participat­ed in this week’s voting effort.

The results of the grass-roots Arizona Educators United and state teachers union walkout vote came exactly one week after Gov. Doug Ducey announced a proposal to boost Arizona teachers’ pay by 20 percent by 2020.

The governor’s hastily announced proposal, intended to quell teachers’ calls for a walkout, came after weeks of protests and peaceful demonstrat­ions by Arizona educators and their supporters.

Some advocacy groups, such as Arizona School Administra­tors and the Arizona School Boards Associatio­n, immediatel­y voiced support for Ducey’s proposal, as did chambers of commerce statewide.

Organizers with the AEU and the Arizona Education Associatio­n criticized Ducey’s plan, saying it left out support profession­als, lacked funding details and didn’t address schools’ broader funding needs for things such as reducing the number of students in each classroom, updating textbooks and purchasing new technology.

Many educators have been divided on Ducey’s proposal.

Many education advocates acknowledg­ed the governor lacked details about how the state would fund the raises but viewed Ducey’s proposal as a good-faith effort to address the state’s teacher pay that consistent­ly ranks at or near the bottom nationally.

Two prominent groups — Save Our Schools Arizona and the Arizona Parent Teacher Associatio­n — initially endorsed the governor’s plan. They withdrew their support Wednesday, saying the state doesn’t have the revenue to support the proposal.

Teachers and school staffers flooded the private Arizona Educators United Facebook page, which has nearly 48,000 members, with differing opinions. Many educators remained adamant in their support for a walkout, an enthusiasm that’s been apparent since the early-March eruption of the #RedForEd movement.

Others believe that while Ducey’s proposal does not address all of the demands educators have laid out, it is a good starting point.

They argued a walkout endangers the overwhelmi­ng public support teachers have mustered to push for the restoratio­n of $1 billion in cuts to education funding since the recession.

The AEU group and AEA distribute­d ballots via union representa­tives and Arizona Educators United “site liaisons,” who are primarily teachers who volunteere­d to serve as the movement’s point of contact for their schools. The 1,000-plus liaisons make up the communicat­ions system for the #RedForEd movement.

But hundreds of district and charter schools across the state did not appear to have any AEU or AEA representa­tives. Internal documentat­ion from the Arizona Educators United group showed about 70 Arizona school districts — many of them single-school districts in the state’s rural pockets — did not have a site liaison.

Teachers in the Osborn, Kyrene and Chandler school districts told The Arizona Republic ahead of Thursday’s vote that several of their educators appeared split on the question of whether to walk out.

Arizona Educators United organizers appeared to prepare for a walkout prior to Thursday’s announceme­nt. The group secured permits to stage #RedForEd rallies at the Arizona Capitol on Friday and for four days next week.

An applicatio­n submitted to the Arizona Legislativ­e Council earlier this week noted that the Friday rally would be from 7 a.m. to 6 p.m. with an estimated crowd of 3,000 to 5,000 people.

Teachers involved in #RedForEd have made five demands of Ducey and the Legislatur­e:

❚ 20 percent salary increase: According to an analysis by the Arizona School Boards Associatio­n published in January, the median teacher pay in 2018 is $46,949. A 20 percent increase would amount to $9,390, for a total of $56,339.

❚ Restore education funding to 2008 levels: This would require adding about $1 billion more in state funding to education. Arizona spends $924 less per student in inflation-adjusted dollars today than it did in 2008, according to the Joint Legislativ­e Budget Committee.

❚ Competitiv­e pay for all education support staff: Ducey’s proposal does not include raises for these individual­s.

❚ Permanent salary structure, including annual raises.

❚ No new tax cuts until per-pupil finding reaches the national average: According to the U.S. Census Bureau’s 2015 figures, the most recent available, Arizona spent $7,489 per pupil, compared with the national average of $11,392.

Reach the reporter at Ricardo.Cano @gannett.com and 602-444-8236. Follow him on Twitter @Ricardo_Cano1.

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 ?? PHOTOS BY PATRICK BREEN/THE REPUBLIC ?? Top: Mesa High School teachers help those coming to count their schools’ ballots Thursday. The state’s teachers voted in favor of a walkout, organizers of the state’s #RedForEd movement announced late Thursday. Above: Extra unused ballots are turned in...
PHOTOS BY PATRICK BREEN/THE REPUBLIC Top: Mesa High School teachers help those coming to count their schools’ ballots Thursday. The state’s teachers voted in favor of a walkout, organizers of the state’s #RedForEd movement announced late Thursday. Above: Extra unused ballots are turned in...
 ?? PATRICK BREEN/THE REPUBLIC ?? At Mesa High School on Thursday, Krista Rowley (center) directs teachers on where to sit to count ballots for deciding whether there will be a statewide teacher walkout. Arizona teachers voted in favor of the walkout.
PATRICK BREEN/THE REPUBLIC At Mesa High School on Thursday, Krista Rowley (center) directs teachers on where to sit to count ballots for deciding whether there will be a statewide teacher walkout. Arizona teachers voted in favor of the walkout.

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