Oklahoma teachers end nearly two-week
walkout that shut schools
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[April 13, 2018]
By Heide Brandes
OKLAHOMA CITY (Reuters) - Oklahoma's
largest teachers union on Thursday called off a nearly two-week walkout
that shut public schools statewide, saying it had secured historic gains
in education funding after school budgets were devastated by a decade of
cuts.
The move came after the Republican-dominated legislature passed its
first major tax hikes in a quarter century that raised about $450
million in revenue for education. Republican leaders said they had no
plans to go as high as the $600 million being sought by educators.
"We absolutely have a victory for teachers," Alicia Priest, president of
the Oklahoma Education Association, told a news conference.
"Our members are saying they want to go back to the classroom," said
Priest, whose union has about 40,000 members.
Some major districts have said they will resume classes on Monday.
The strike was part of a wave of actions by teachers in states that have
some of the lowest per-student spending in the country. A West Virginia
strike ended last month with a pay raise for teachers, and educators in
Arizona protested before classes on Wednesday, without skipping work, to
seek enhanced education funding.
The Oklahoma walkout began on April 2 and affected about 500,000 of the
state's 700,000 public school students.
Opinion surveys showed it had garnered wide support among Oklahoma
voters, many of whom had seen firsthand how students at struggling
schools had to share outdated and tattered textbooks and sometimes go to
a four-day school week to help save districts money.
Oklahoma teachers, who were seeking a $10,000 annual wage hike over
three years, will see an average annual pay raise of about $6,100 from
the increased funding, lawmakers said.
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Protester march during a strike by Oklahoma educators demanding more
school funding near the Oklahoma state Capitol in Oklahoma City,
Oklahoma, U.S., April 9, 2018. Picture taken on April 9, 2018.
REUTERS/Heide Brandes
In May 2017, their annual mean wage was $41,880, among the lowest in
the country, compared with neighboring states such as Texas at
$57,830 and Kansas at $50,470, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor
Statistics.
School districts for the most part supported the teacher walk-out.
But they began to run out of wiggle room to make up for lost time
when the labor action threatened to extend the school year, piling
pressure on teachers to return.
Low wages have created an exodus of educators, causing a teacher
shortage in Oklahoma. As a result, school districts had to cut
curricula and deploy nearly 2,000 emergency-certified instructors as
a stop-gap measure.
(Reporting by Heide Brandes in Oklahoma City and Lenzy
Krehbiel-Burton in Tulsa; Writing by Jon Herskovitz; Editing by Bill
Tarrant and Sandra Maler)
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