The Signal

West Virginia teacher strike ends after pay hike granted

- John Bacon Contributi­ng: Greg Toppo

West Virginia Gov. Jim Justice signed legislatio­n Tuesday authorizin­g a contract agreement with the state’s 20,000 teachers that will return 275,000 public school students to class as early as Wednesday.

“Today is a new day in education, no more looking back,” Justice said at a signing ceremony for the deal, which includes a 5% pay raise and ends the nineday strike. The contract also covers more than 10,000 support staff. Justice said money will be found elsewhere in the budget to allow the state to provide a 5% pay hike to all state employees. Some of those pay increases, however, must wait for passage of a budget bill.

“I’m an educator, I believe in your purpose,” Justice told hundreds of roaring teachers and supporters gathered earlier at the Capitol in Charleston.

The state House and Senate approved the deal a short time later, sending it to Justice for his signature.

“It was a very positive, emotional celebratio­n for teachers at the Capitol,” said Jennifer Wood, spokeswoma­n for the state American Federation of Teachers (AFT).

Carrena Rouse, who has taught at Scott High School in Madison for 28 years, was one of the celebratin­g teachers. Her district was among those immediatel­y announcing their schools would open Wednesday.

“I love my students, I love my fellow teachers,” Rouse said. “And I’m glad we don’t have to be hanging around here (the Capitol) anymore.”

West Virginia teachers are among the lowest paid in the nation and went years without a raise. Randi Weingarten, AFT national president, said the state’s teachers had been saddled with shrinking salaries due to fast-rising health care costs.

“The unwritten story here is that when you strip people’s voice for so long and you take so much from them, there is a point at which people will stand up,” Weingarten told USA TODAY. “And that is the story of what happened in West Virginia.”

Massive rallies have taken place at the Capitol almost daily, and it had to close Monday after thousands packed the building.

Many districts planned to reopen schools Wednesday. But Wood said it was not immediatel­y clear whether all schools could open that fast, citing logistical issues such as stocking kitchens with food for school lunches.

“These are some of the best kids you will ever see in your life,” Rouse said. “I’m just so excited.”

 ?? CRAIG HUDSON/CHARLESTON GAZETTE-MAIL VIA AP ?? Teachers, from right, Kara Brown, Katherine Dudley, Nina Tunstalle and Lois Casto celebrate the strike’s end.
CRAIG HUDSON/CHARLESTON GAZETTE-MAIL VIA AP Teachers, from right, Kara Brown, Katherine Dudley, Nina Tunstalle and Lois Casto celebrate the strike’s end.

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