Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Clinton, Sanders, Warren to address teachers here

- By Elizabeth Behrman

Thousands of educators from across the country will be joined this weekend by former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and U.S. Sens. Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren as they converge on Pittsburgh for the biennial convention of the American Federation of Teachers.

The teachers will gather at the David L. Lawrence Convention Center, Downtown, just weeks after the U.S. Supreme Court dealt public sector unions a major blow and after months of teacher strikes and calls for change in public education across the country.

“We are at this solemn and scary inflection point in our country where there are really troubling trends and amazing activism at the same time,” AFT President Randi Weingarten said Tuesday. “It is really surreal.”

The AFT represents more than 1.7 million teachers, paraprofes­sionals and other school

personnel in more than 3,000 affiliates across the country. The AFT has 61 affiliates in Pennsylvan­ia, including in Pittsburgh and Philadelph­ia.

Both the AFT and the National Education Associatio­n, the largest teachers union in the country, endorsed Ms. Clinton in the 2016 presidenti­al election.

Ms. Weingarten, who has served as the AFT’s national president for 10 years, will deliver her “state of the union” address Friday morning before Ms. Clinton speaks to the conference. Ms. Warren, D-Mass., will speak on Saturday, and Mr. Sanders, I-Vt., will speak on Sunday. The presidents of the SEIU, the National Education Associatio­n and the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees also are scheduled to speak on Saturday.

A rally and march is scheduled for Saturday afternoon Downtown to call for more investment in public education.

“My hope is that the members walk out of the convention seeing themselves in the union, feeling a renewed spirit for the fight,” Ms. Weingarten said.

The convention is being held just a little over two weeks after the Supreme Court ruled June 27 in favor of Mark Janus, an employee of the Illinois Department of Healthcare and Family Services. The court determined that labor unions cannot require public sector workers to pay dues. The historic decision broke 40 years of precedent and marked a major blow to unions that represent teachers, emergency officials and other government employees across the country.

The Pittsburgh convention also follows a wave of union activity across the country in 2018, during which teachers in West Virginia, Arizona, Colorado, Oklahoma and Kentucky walked off the job, calling for better pay and more money from their state legislator­s for public education.

A teacher strike was averted in Pittsburgh in February after the Pittsburgh Federation of Teachers and Pittsburgh Public Schools reached agreement on a three-year contract after months of tense negotiatio­ns. The PFT’s roughly 3,000 members voted overwhelmi­ngly to authorize a strike and issued a four-day notice to the school district and the community that it intended to stop work if an agreement wasn’t reached.

“Everyone is coming together, just showing that solidarity,” PFT President Nina Esposito-Visgitis said. “And it’s just perfect. That’s what Pittsburgh is. A place where we fight back and stick together.”

The convention will be held Friday through Monday.

 ??  ?? Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., will address the American Federation of Teachers.
Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., will address the American Federation of Teachers.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States