North Carolina teachers rally for more
funds in latest U.S. school walk-out
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[May 16, 2018]
By Marti Maguire
RALEIGH, N.C. (Reuters) - Thousands of
North Carolina teachers were expected to rally at the capitol on
Wednesday for higher pay and increased education spending in a walk-out
that follows similar protests from teachers in other states seeking more
money for schools.
The protests are part of a wave of actions and strikes this year by
teachers in states including West Virginia, Kentucky, Oklahoma, Arizona
and Colorado who feel lawmakers have failed to adequately pay teachers
and provide for schools.
Up to 20,000 teachers and supporters are expected to march through
downtown to the Republican-dominated legislature as it goes into
session, organizers said.
At least 38 districts, representing more than half of the state’s 1.5
million public school students, canceled schools due to teacher
absences, it said.
The North Carolina Association of Educators, which planned the event, is
calling for per-student spending and teacher pay to be raised to at
least the national average, and for lawmakers to restore funding for
public schools to pre-recession levels.
“This is about so much more than teacher pay,” President Mark Jewell
said in an interview, adding the group's long-term goal is ousting
lawmakers who favor tax cuts for business at the expense of spending for
education.
Republican leaders note this year’s planned salary increase of 6 percent
would mark the fifth consecutive annual increase. While the state ranks
39th among states for average teacher salary in the most recent report
by the National Education Association, it has seen some of the highest
percent increases in recent years, they said
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“Despite these facts, we know, there’s a lot of politically motivated
rhetoric and misinformation out there,” Republican Senator Phil Berger,
president pro tempore, said at a news conference on Tuesday.
Some Republicans criticized protesters for holding the rallies on a
school day. Mark Brody, a Republican state representative from the
Charlotte area, referred to organizers as “bullies and self-serving
thugs” in a Facebook post.
Carolynn Phillips, teacher of the year for Brunswick County, said it is
worth losing a school day for long-terms gains for the education system.
“This is nothing in comparison to what our state’s students have to gain
by re-positioning education at the forefront of our priorities,”
Phillips said in an interview.
(Reporting by Marti Maguire; Additional reporting by Kirk Bado in Chapel
Hill, N.C.; Writing by Jon Herskovitz; Editing by Michael Perry)
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