Santa Fe New Mexican

From the schoolhous­e to the Roundhouse

Current, former educators’ influence grows in Legislatur­e

- By Dillon Mullan dmullan@sfnewmexic­an.com

G. Andrés Romero offered granola bars he had bought while his students compared after-school jobs tossing pizza dough and waiting tables. After asking a transfer student about where his last history class left off, Romero divided the class into groups to examine U.S. involvemen­t in World War I.

“Mr. Romero, he’s chill,” junior Jaiden Smith said. “He’s got snacks. When we work, he plays music.”

At Atrisco Heritage Academy, Albuquerqu­e’s largest high school with nearly 2,500 students, Mr. Romero teaches American history in the face of hunger, jobs and other out-of-school realities for students in his native South Valley. At the Roundhouse, Rep. Romero chairs the House Education

Committee amid a recent surge of teachers and educators in the Legislatur­e who are advocating for the state’s public schools while representi­ng New Mexico’s working class.

“Students are always talking about work, which in a lot of ways make it harder to engage in an extracurri­cular activity. It makes doing homework more difficult,” Romero said. “I hear them talking among themselves, and sometimes they bring some of these issues they deal with at home straight to me. I think that’s what any teacher adds to the Legislatur­e — a voice that can represent what students face both inside and outside the classroom.”

An Albuquerqu­e Public Schools alum, Romero defeated Randy Saavedra — the son of former legislator Kiki Saavedra — in his first Democratic primary in 2014. His mother, Mary Ann Romero, taught at Los Padillas Elementary in Albuquerqu­e for 20 years before retiring in 2015 in part because of strict teacher evaluation­s, overtestin­g and other policies forced by former Gov. Susana Martinez.

While Romero, 33, is occupied by legislativ­e duties, his mother serves as the substitute in his classroom.

“My mom is my permanent sub,” Romero said. “I’ll check emails from students during the session, but she’s got it under control.”

Power struggle

In the last statewide election of the Martinez administra­tion in 2018, the number of current and retired public school employees in the Roundhouse surged to 16, according

I think that’s what any teacher adds to the Legislatur­e — a voice that can represent what students face both inside and outside the classroom.”

Rep. G. Andrés Romero, an Albuquerqu­e Democrat and high school history teacher

to legislativ­e bios. Shannon Pinto, a former middle and high school math teacher in Tohatchi, was appointed to replace her late grandfathe­r, John Pinto, in the Senate last summer, pushing the amount of current and former pubic school employees to over 15 percent of all state representa­tives and senators.

Since taking office, Romero, whose wife, Athena Torretti, is an elementary school librarian, has been joined in the House by fellow Albuquerqu­e Public Schools teachers Natalie Figueroa, Joy Garratt and Debra Sariñana, as well as Gadsden schools program coordinato­r Raymundo Lara and educationa­l assistant Willie Madrid.

This session, current and former educators have introduced legislatio­n to expand free school meals, help retired teachers serve as substitute­s and create mentorship programs designed to retain new teachers.

Still, educators lack a seat on the influentia­l Legislativ­e Finance Committee. “We need more teachers in with the discussion on the financing of public education. That’s the broad structural change that I think would be important,” Romero said. “We need to see the [Legislativ­e Education Study Committee] proposal reflected in the budget-making process, period.”

The Legislativ­e Education Study Committee, where six of 10 members are current or retired educators, submitted a budget request that included 6 percent raises for teachers, principals and other school personnel, although superinten­dents say larger increases are needed to combat a widespread teacher shortage.

The budget approved by the House last week keeps the entry level salary for a Level I teacher at $41,000 per year and contains 5 percent salary increases for teachers and a 4 percent increase for all other school personnel.

“Last year the LESC and the LFC worked together to come up with the moonshot,” Sen. Mimi Stewart, a retired special-education teacher in Albuquerqu­e Public Schools and past chairwoman of the Legislativ­e Education Study Committee, said in reference to a roughly 17 percent increase in education spending last session.

“We didn’t have the same level of collaborat­ion this time around.”

Rep. Christine Trujillo, a retired elementary school bilingual teacher in Albuquerqu­e Public Schools and current chairwoman of the Legislativ­e Education Study Committee, said she isn’t optimistic about educators gaining seats on the Legislativ­e Finance Committee going forward.

“Those are territoria­l seats largely dominated by rural representa­tives where everyone thinks they’re a power broker,” Trujillo said. “An educator getting onto the LFC, I’m not hopeful of that. Not with the way the process works. We need a reality check there.”

Trujillo said she supports the reintroduc­tion of HB 3 in which the Legislativ­e Education Study Committee proposed its own education budget until Republican­s

took over the House in 2015. Since then the committee has released a budget recommenda­tion instead of a bill.

Representi­ng the working class

Madrid, the education assistant in Gadsden, said he’s seen his salary increase from around $16,000 to $20,000 over the last seven school years.

Friday afternoon, Madrid spent lunchtime with students from downtown Albuquerqu­e’s Amy Biehl Charter High School at an anti-bullying event in Santa Fe.

“Sometimes I look across to see my colleagues have lost perspectiv­e about who they’re serving,” Madrid said. “I have to remind people we’re 50th in child well-being. We have to understand the problems we’re working to fix.”

Madrid spoke with students about growing up in foster care in Chaparral as well as the need to have more lawmakers who have experience living in poverty.

“A rich retired guy who went to private school and college with people who are all the same as him, they’re not going to know what it’s like in public schools for most people in this state,” said Jonah Lewis, a junior at Amy Biehl. “Teachers see things like homelessne­ss and mental health problems every day. To me, teachers are more valid

representa­tion.”

While legislator­s earn daily pay during the session and are reimbursed for mileage to official meetings, Madrid said he’s losing money when he travels to meet with constituen­ts. New Mexico is the only state without a salaried Legislatur­e, which Madrid and others say discourage­s young and working-class candidates from running for office.

“In the Legislatur­e, teachers are the closest we get to the blue-collar workers of New Mexico who show up to a job site every day, work for a boss and get a check at the end of the month,” said Sen. Bill Soules, a former elementary school principal who still teaches part time at Oñate High School in Las Cruces. “Teachers look more representa­tive of New Mexico. They’re a more diverse group instead of old retired white males.”

Back at Atrisco Heritage in South Albuquerqu­e, Romero’s students say he understand­s his district.

“In this area, kids face a lot of problems at home. But I feel like if kids just got put in the right position to be successful, they wouldn’t just become their environmen­t,” junior Chris Rios said after the lesson on World War I.

“I think Mr. Romero gets that. I think it’s important a politician sees that.”

Sometimes I look across to see my colleagues have lost perspectiv­e about who they’re serving. I have to remind people we’re 50th in child well-being.” State Rep. Willie Madrid, an educationa­l assistant

 ?? DILLON MULLAN AND LUKE E. MONTAVON/THE NEW MEXICAN ?? ABOVE: Rep. G. Andrés Romero, D-Albuquerqu­e, teaches American history at Atrisco Heritage High School in South Albuquerqu­e.
DILLON MULLAN AND LUKE E. MONTAVON/THE NEW MEXICAN ABOVE: Rep. G. Andrés Romero, D-Albuquerqu­e, teaches American history at Atrisco Heritage High School in South Albuquerqu­e.
 ??  ?? TOP: Romero presides Friday as chairman of the House Education Committee.
TOP: Romero presides Friday as chairman of the House Education Committee.

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