Chattanooga Times Free Press

Tennessee teachers group drops one of two lawsuits challengin­g new state laws

- BY MARTA W. ALDRICH Marta Aldrich is a senior correspond­ent and covers the statehouse for Chalkbeat Tennessee. Contact her at maldrich@chalkbeat.org. Chalkbeat is a nonprofit news site covering educationa­l change in public schools.

This story was originally by Chalkbeat. Sign up for their newsletter­s at ckbe.at/newsletter­s.

Tennessee’s largest teacher organizati­on, which recently challenged two new state laws affecting educators, has quietly dropped its lawsuit about payroll dues deduction, while its other lawsuit over classroom censorship moves ahead in federal court.

The Tennessee Education Associatio­n asked a state court to dismiss its case challengin­g a 2023 law that prohibits local school districts from making payroll deductions for employees’ profession­al associatio­n dues.

A three-judge panel, which had let the payroll ban proceed while the case was being tried, granted the associatio­n’s request for a dismissal Monday.

DEC. 12 MEETING

Meanwhile, a federal judge has set a Dec. 12 meeting with all parties in the organizati­on’s other lawsuit to discuss how that case will proceed. The teachers group has joined with five public school educators to challenge a 2021 state law restrictin­g teachers from discussing certain concepts about race and gender with their students.

The federal case is being spearheade­d by the Free and Fair Litigation Group, a nonprofit firm created by two veteran prosecutor­s who led the Manhattan district attorney’s investigat­ion into Donald Trump’s business dealings. The firm’s focus is on pursuing high-impact cases that bolster democracy.

“TEA’s challenge of the prohibited concepts law is unrelated to the payroll lawsuit. We believe we have a strong case and that federal court will rule in favor of Tennessee teachers,” associatio­n President Tanya Coats said Thursday.

The associatio­n filed its first lawsuit after Gov. Bill Lee pushed through a new law linking the ban on payroll dues collection to a popular provision aimed at raising teacher pay.

The lawsuit charged that Lee’s strategy violates the state constituti­on’s singlesubj­ect requiremen­t for laws.

A new state court — with judges from Davidson, Fayette and Hamilton counties — had temporaril­y blocked the law from taking effect July 1 while attorneys for the Tennessee Education Associatio­n and state made their arguments in the case. But the panel lifted that order July 28 after deciding the plaintiffs were unlikely to win based on the merits of their arguments. The judges said the bill’s caption of “being relative to wages” was broad enough to address payroll deductions, too.

“TEA is still confident in the merits of our case and believes we would have ultimately received a favorable ruling,” Coats said in response. “But TEA decided not to pursue the lawsuit because it is unlikely that the court would rule on the case this school year.”

When the payroll ban passed the legislatur­e in April, the teachers group began converting members to online dues payment. Most members have made the switch, according to Coats.

MEMBERSHIP DROP UNCERTAIN

Whether the payroll changes will lead to a drop in associatio­n membership is uncertain.

The latest numbers from the National Education Associatio­n showed Tennessee’s organizati­on had 36,218 members in 2020-21, down 4% from the previous year.

But Coats, who is an educator from Knox County, suggested the organizati­on’s recent advocacy work for public school communitie­s is having the opposite effect. If anything, she said, educator frustratio­n with the new laws has “energized” support for the organizati­on.

“TEA is signing up new members every day and converting the remaining members from payroll deduction,” she said. “The attempt from some state leaders to silence educators has only strengthen­ed educators’ resolve to fight for their students and the profession they love.”

The state’s new dues law also affected Profession­al Educators of Tennessee, the state’s second largest teacher organizati­on. That group mostly uses its own online system to collect dues, but also had payroll deductions set up with eight school districts.

JC Bowman, the group’s executive director, agreed with the Tennessee Education Associatio­n that the legislatur­e should have considered the matters of teacher pay and payroll deductions separately. But he worried the associatio­n’s legal challenge over the payroll issue could have put pay raises at risk.

“That part was concerning to us,” Bowman said Friday.

If that had happened, Bowman’s organizati­on would have interceded in court on behalf of its members, he said.

The law’s pay schedule sets Tennessee’s base salary for teachers at $42,000 for this school year; $44,500 for 2024-25; $47,000 for 2025-26; and $50,000 for 2026-27. A raise in the base pay also affects how more experience­d teachers are paid.

“TEA is signing up new members every day and converting the remaining members from payroll deduction. The attempt from some state leaders to silence educators has only strengthen­ed educators’ resolve to fight for their students and the profession they love.” — TENNESSEE EDUCATION ASSOCIATIO­N PRESIDENT TANYA COATS

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