Oklahoma teachers vow to stage second day
of walkouts
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[April 03, 2018]
By Lenzy Krehbiel-Burton
OKLAHOMA CITY (Reuters) - Thousands of
Oklahoma school teachers, including those in the state's two biggest
cities, were expected to return to picket lines on Tuesday for the
second day of strikes demanding state lawmakers do more to shore up
public education spending.
A walkout by more than 30,000 educators in Oklahoma, whose teachers rank
among the lowest-paid in the United States, forced the cancellation of
classes for some 500,000 of the state's 700,000 public school students
on Monday, union officials said.
Many of the striking teachers traveled by the busload to Oklahoma City
for a mass rally on the capitol grounds before lobbying legislators in
the halls of the statehouse. They vowed to continue their protests
indefinitely.
"When our members believe the legislature has committed to funding our
children's future, they will return to the classroom," the Oklahoma
Education Association, the state's biggest teachers union, said in a
statement posted online.
Classes in about 200 of the state's 584 school districts were disrupted
by Monday's walkout, according to the union.
Schools in the state's two biggest cities, Tulsa and Oklahoma City, will
remain closed on Tuesday as the walkout extends into a second day, union
officials said. The Oklahoman newspaper listed more than two dozen
districts expected to be shuttered for the day as well.
The job action reflected rising discontent with years of sluggish or
declining public school spending in Oklahoma, which ranked 47th among
all 50 states in per-student expenditures and 48th in average teacher
salaries in 2016, according to the National Education Association.
The Oklahoma strikes on Monday coincided with a second day of walkouts
by several thousand teachers in Kentucky after legislators there passed
a bill imposing new limits on the state's underfunding public employee
pension system.
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Oklahoma teachers rally outside the state Capitol in Oklahoma City,
Oklahoma, U.S., April 2, 2018. REUTERS/Lenzy Krehbiel-Burton
The protests come a month after teachers in West Virginia staged a
series of strikes for nearly two weeks before winning a pay raise.
Teachers in Arizona also rallied last week for more educational
funding.
Educators say years of austerity in many states have led to wage
stagnation and the hollowing-out of school systems. West Virginia,
Kentucky and Oklahoma all have Republican governors and
Republican-controlled legislatures that have resisted tax increases.
Oklahoma legislators last week approved, and Governor Mary Fallin
signed into law, the state's first major tax hike in a quarter
century - a $450 million revenue package intended to help fund
teacher raises and avert a strike.
But teachers, some of whom have complained of having to work second
jobs to make ends meet, said the package fell short and demanded
lawmakers go further by reversing spending cuts that have forced
some districts to impose four-day school weeks.
(Additional reporting by Jon Herskovitz in Austin, Texas, and Steve
Bittenbender in Louisville, Kentucky; Editing by Paul Tait)
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