Oklahoma approves tax deal but teachers
vow to extend strike
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[April 07, 2018]
By Lenzy Krehbiel-Burton
TULSA, Okla. (Reuters) - The Oklahoma
Senate passed a $44 million revenue and tax package on Friday to fund
the state's public schools, but the amount fell short of new spending
sought by teachers who walked out in protest of a decade of education
budget cuts and low salaries.
Teachers vowed to extend into next week their already five-day-old
strike, which has affected more than 500,000 students statewide. They
are seeking $200 million in increased annual education funding.
"Educators have been passionately advocating for their students and
asking the legislature to provide more funding for our classrooms after
a decade of neglect of Oklahoma’s public schools. Today the legislature
started to hear us," said Alicia Priest, president of the Oklahoma
Education Association, the state's largest teachers union with about
40,000 members.
Priest told the Republican-dominated legislature they could end the
walkout if they removed capital gains exemptions, saying the move could
bring in an additional $100 million in revenue.
She also wanted the legislature to implement a hotel tax that was passed
last month but later halted by lawmakers. It would bring in an estimated
$50 million.
The strike has garnered strong public backing, with a statewide survey
from the Sooner Poll agency showing that 72.1 percent of respondents
supported the walk-out.
Several districts said they would close on Monday due to the strike
including Oklahoma City and Tulsa public schools, the state's two
largest districts.
The job action comes after a West Virginia strike last month ended with
a pay raise and as teachers in other states grow increasingly angry over
stagnating wages are consider walk-outs.
For a graphic on 2017 U.S. teacher salaries, see:
(https://tmsnrt.rs/2IsvlGa)
The Senate sent an internet sales tax measure that would bring in an
estimated $20 million to the desk of Republican Governor Mary Fallin and
a gambling measure that could bring in about $24 million.
Fallin has said she supports a teacher pay-raise and is expected to sign
the measures.
Tens of thousands of teachers have come to the state Capitol this week
calling for increased spending for an education system whose
inflation-adjusted general funding per student dropped by 28.2 percent
between 2008 and 2018, the biggest reduction of any state, according to
the nonpartisan Center on Budget and Policy Priorities.
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Teachers pack the state Capitol rotunda to capacity, on the second
day of a teacher walkout, to demand higher pay and more funding for
education, in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, U.S., April 3, 2018.
REUTERS/Nick Oxford
Some have spent the entire school week at the Capitol, filling
galleries and joining rallies outside. Many say they are tired but
energized by the support they have received.
"We just want to make sure that they are going to fix the problem
and not dismantle it the minute we leave," said Lindsay Burkhalter,
a fourth-grade teacher in Ponca City, about 105 miles (170 km) north
of Oklahoma City.
Last week, lawmakers approved the state's first major tax increase
in a quarter century, a $400 million revenue package that raised
teacher pay by an average of about $6,000.
That was not enough for the teachers, who are seeking $10,000 over
three years. Even with the pay raise approved by lawmakers, their
mean salaries would be lower than teachers in every neighboring
state, U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics data showed.
Oklahoma has the lowest median pay among states for both elementary
and secondary school teachers, according to 2018 bureau data. The
minimum salary for a first-year teacher was $31,600, state data
showed.
A major cause of budget strain comes from tax breaks Oklahoma
granted to its energy industry, which were worth $470 million in
fiscal-year 2015 alone.
When energy prices sharply declined a few years ago, so did the
state's tax revenue, leading to deeper cuts in education spending,
which was already on the decline.
As a consequence of low pay at home and better opportunities across
state lines, Oklahoma is grappling with a teacher shortage that has
forced some school districts to cut curricula, adopt a four-day
school week and enlist nearly 2,000 emergency-certified
replacements.
(Reporting by Lenzy Krehbiel-Burton in Tulsa and Jon Herskovitz in
Austin, Texas; Writing by Jon Herskovitz; Editing by Leslie Adler
and Matthew Lewis)
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