Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Teachers’ political push stretching to 2020

- SEAN MURPHY

OKLAHOMA CITY — Betty Collins was born and raised in Tulsa, but the eighth-grade history teacher hadn’t been to the state Capitol in Oklahoma City until last spring, when educators throughout the state walked off the job to protest for better wages and public-school funding.

Since that successful walkout, Collins has volunteere­d for pro-education political campaigns and revived her school’s Parent Legislativ­e Action Committee chapter. She also has been back to the Statehouse twice this year to press officials from her district to support public schools and helped host a meet-and-greet with lawmakers at her school.

The continued political engagement of Collins, many other educators like her and their supporters suggests that the teacher movement that sparked walkouts in half a dozen states last year didn’t end with the election of dozens of teachers to state legislatur­es or hard-won gains in teacher pay and school funding. Teacher unions in Oklahoma and other walkout states, including Arizona, Kentucky and West Virginia, all report increases in membership since the demonstrat­ions, and many are busy recruiting political candidates for 2020.

“The main thing for me is getting other teachers to be active,” Collins said. “We’ve found that teachers have a huge voice, and if we can just get more teachers more engaged, that voice will only be louder and harder to ignore.”

In Oklahoma, the movement resulted in a slight philosophi­cal shift in the Republican-controlled Legislatur­e. A record number of teachers ran for and won seats in the Legislatur­e last year, and energized supporters participat­ed in political campaigns and helped oust a record 12 Republican incumbents from office, including eight who had voted against a tax increase to fund teacher raises.

Spurred by the threat of a work stoppage last year, the Oklahoma Legislatur­e has now given teachers most of what they wanted, including big boosts in school funding and back-to-back pay raises.

“The thing is, you don’t have to change party control in the Legislatur­e or even change legislator­s to affect change” there, said Keith Gaddie, a professor and political scientist at the University of Oklahoma. “All you have to do is scare them. And every lawmaker is going to scoff when someone like me says you have to scare them, but the fact is they are all scared to lose re-election.”

Although there was no organized walkout this year, teachers continued to be a presence at the Capitol. Delegation­s of teachers and administra­tors from throughout the state regularly met with their elected officials to lobby for education and oppose measures they viewed as anti-public education, such as a bill that would have extended tax credits for private-school scholarshi­ps.

“I lovingly refer to it as ‘teacher Tuesdays’ because most of the schools that I represent have continuous delegation­s that come every Tuesday,” said state Sen. Carri Hicks, a Democrat and former elementary school teacher who won what had been a Republican-held seat in northweste­rn Oklahoma City in November. “It’s a very tangible reminder that the education community is watching.”

Parents also are becoming more politicall­y active, with new Parent Legislativ­e Action Committee chapters, which are nonpartisa­n groups of pro-education volunteers, popping up in school districts throughout the state.

Misty Bradley, a mother of three school-age children in the Oklahoma City suburb of Edmond, said it was during the teacher walkout that she saw photos of public schools with broken furniture, leaky roofs and textbooks that dated back to her own high school days.

“I already knew that teachers weren’t paid and respected enough, but I definitely was awakened to the reality that it was a lot worse than I’d ever understood,” Bradley said. “I was ashamed for our state.”

Bradley and other parents from her district helped form a Parent Legislativ­e Action Committee chapter, and for the first time, she became involved in a political campaign.

“I gave money. I talked to neighbors and friends about who they were voting for. I began to have conversati­ons that I would have avoided before. It was too important not to say something,” she said.

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