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						Kamala Harris courts unions, minorities with call to 
						raise teacher pay
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		 [March 26, 2019]   
		By Amanda Becker and Sharon Bernstein 
 WASHINGTON/SACRAMENTO, Calif. (Reuters) - 
		U.S. Senator Kamala Harris on Tuesday released a plan that would use 
		federal money to raise teachers' salaries, in a nod to several 
		constituencies whose help she will need to win next year's Democratic 
		presidential nomination – teachers unions, women and black voters.
 
 The proposal – Harris' first major policy rollout as a 2020 White House 
		candidate – would invest $315 billion over 10 years to give the average 
		teacher a $13,500 raise, or about a 23 percent salary increase, 
		according to a Harris campaign aide. It would be financed by expanding 
		an estate tax on the wealthy but the aide did not provide details.
 
 The National Education Association (NEA), which has 3 million members, 
		and the American Federation of Teachers (AFT), which has 1.7 million 
		members, are likely months away from endorsing in the 2020 Democratic 
		primary, if they do so at all.
 
		
		 
		
 AFT President Randi Weingarten described Harris' plan as "bold" and 
		called on other candidates to offer their own detailed proposals. 
		Harris' campaign shared the proposal with labor leaders over the 
		weekend, as she announced her intention to raise teacher pay at a 
		campaign rally in Houston.
 
 "She actually understands that we have a real problem here," Weingarten 
		told Reuters in an interview. "Parents are saying they don't want their 
		kids to become teachers and teachers are selling their blood plasma to 
		make ends meet."
 
 Harris' rollout comes after a wave of high-profile teachers strikes 
		across the country that drew attention to stagnant teachers' salaries – 
		including in Los Angeles and Oakland in Harris' home state of 
		California, where her campaign aims for a strong showing.
 
 "Having the endorsement of a teachers' union is huge in California. 
		They're trusted allies and trusted validators as far as voters are 
		concerned," said Roger Salazar, a Democratic strategist in Sacramento, 
		California, who has advised gubernatorial and congressional campaigns.
 
 As the strikes showed, teachers are a politically active group and their 
		support for a candidate can "turn into a lot of doors knocked on and a 
		lot of activity for you up and down the state," he added.
 
		
		 
		
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			U.S. Senator Kamala Harris launches her campaign for president of 
			the United States at a rally at Frank H. Ogawa Plaza in her hometown 
			of Oakland, California, U.S., January 27, 2019. REUTERS/Elijah 
			Nouvelage/File Photo 
            
			 
California, the most populous U.S. state, moved up its 2020 primary to "Super 
Tuesday" in early March. It has about 500 of roughly 3,800 Democratic state 
delegates that will officially pick the eventual nominee at the Democratic 
National Convention.
 Teacher salaries are typically set by state and local governments. But Harris 
said in Houston that teacher pay is a national crisis that merits a national 
response, citing data from the liberal-leaning Economic Policy Institute that 
teachers make on average 11 percent less than other similarly qualified 
professionals with college degrees.
 
Under her plan, which Reuters reviewed ahead of its release, the U.S. Department 
of Education would coordinate with state education agencies to set base salary 
goals for teachers, the federal government would provide the first 10 percent of 
funding to raise salaries and then give $3 for every $1 a state uses for pay 
increases.
 The federal government would also provide additional money to boost teacher 
salaries in high-need schools that disproportionately serve black and Hispanic 
students and fund teacher recruitment and training programs at historically 
black colleges and other institutions that serve minority populations.
 
 
  
Harris' campaign cited data showing that in the women-dominated field of 
education, female teachers have lower average salaries than male teachers with 
the same education and experience. Black teachers likewise have lower average 
salaries than white teachers.
 Harris' teacher pay proposal could resonate with Democratic primary voters 
beyond California. In South Carolina, which hosts the first primary in which 
black voters are a sizeable Democratic constituency, legislators are weighing a 
teacher pay increase. In Texas, which also votes on "Super Tuesday," the 
Republican governor has said low teacher pay is an emergency and called for 
raises.
 
 (Reporting by Amanda in Washington and Sharon Bernstein in Sacramento; Editing 
by Lisa Shumaker)
 
				 
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