In Arizona, school reopening sparks protest movement
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[July 20, 2020]
By Andrew Hay and Brendan O'Brien
July 18 (Reuters) - Arizona third-grade
teacher Stacy Brosius has been called a "liberal socialist Nazi" and a
"whiner and complainer" for leading car-based protests to delay
in-person schooling, but she says she's doing it to save lives in a
pandemic.
Inspired by Black Lives Matter demonstrations, hundreds of Arizona
teachers like Brosius are putting on red t-shirts they last wore in a
2018 strike and driving around cities in cars daubed with slogans like:
"Remote learning won't kill us but COVID can!"
With "motor marches" spreading to other coronavirus-hit sunbelt states,
including Florida, and counter demonstrators organizing "reopen"
rallies, the fight over the new school year is fast becoming America's
new protest flashpoint.
In Arizona, teachers want Republican Governor Doug Ducey to push the
start of in-person school to at least early October after a beloved
educator died of COVID-19 teaching summer school and statewide
hospitalizations and deaths spiral.
At stake, Arizona teachers say, is the safety of the state's 1.1 million
public school students and 20,000 teachers.
"We don’t want any children to get this from us, because as a teacher, I
don’t want to go to any of their funerals," said Brosius, 47, who is not
prepared to send her three children back to school.
School re-openings have become a white-hot election issue after
President Donald Trump demanded a return to in-person learning
throughout the United States, while Democrats urge remote schooling
until COVID-19 case rates flatten.
Arizona has been hit hard by the virus this summer as its 7-day average
of new cases has gone from 500 at the end of May to more than 3,000 in
July, while hospitals' intensive care capacity, according to most recent
data from Arizona Department of Public Health, stood at a nearly 90
percent this week.
Ducey on Thursday said he would not be swayed by politics, adding he
would be comfortable sending his children back to school, as did the
state's health chief, Cara Christ.
With slogans like "freedom over fear," Arizona parents are demanding
their children have the option of in-person learning. A "REOPEN our
SCHOOLS" protest is set for July 30 in Phoenix in support of Ducey's
mandate that in-person classes resume Aug. 17, after the Deer Valley
Unified School District delayed their start until Oct. 14.
"All we want is our choices back," said protest organizer Christina
DeRouchey, the mother of four school-age children.
'RED FOR ED'
Teachers wearing "Red for Ed" t-shirts - the same garb they wore during
a successful week-long pay strike two years ago -- are planning a much
larger motor march July 22 to circle the state capitol and governor’s
office.
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A slogan is seen on a car in "a motor march” protest of teachers who
took it to their vehicles to demand a delay in in-person learning in
the fall, due to the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak, in
Phoenix, Arizona, U.S., July 15, 2020. Picture taken July 15, 2020.
REUTERS/Kelley Fisher
The red shirts are a symbol of nationwide strikes by educators over
the past few years that some believe may be rekindled this fall.
Arizona teachers are not alone in their protests. Teacher unions
across the nation, especially those recently entangled in labor
battles, are organizing to become active participants in when and
how to re-open schools.
The United Teachers Los Angeles have won an indefinite delay to
in-person learning. Others in more conservative states such as
Florida are trying to push back classroom start dates and boost
funding for personal protective equipment.
"This is a core piece of what our educators come together for, which
is to demand that schools are properly funded," said Joe Thomas,
president of the Arizona Education Association (AEA) "Until we can
see that, we are not ready to come back to schools."
Much like they did in 2018, Arizona educators are using social media
hashtags and online petitions to demand schools not have funding
reduced if students switch to remote learning.
"I’m going to compare it to our walkout in 2018," said Kelley
Fisher, a kindergarten teacher who helped organize the walkout
campaign in 2018. "It’s not fair to put any child or any teacher or
any family’s life at stake because they have to open a school
building."
Ducey, who has the authority to open or close schools, moved the
start of school back until Aug. 17, a delay of one or two weeks for
most districts in response to the rise in coronavirus cases. Some
have decided to begin the school year with remote learning while
others will implement online and in-person instruction.
Ducey said on Thursday he will finalize his decision on the
re-opening of schools next week after he speaks with educators
around the state.
"Our kids are going to be learning in the fall. We are going to do
our best to conduct the most positive educational year that we can,"
Ducey said.
(Reporting by Brendan O'Brien in Chicago and Andrew Hay in Taos, New
Mexico; additional reporting by David Schwartz in Phoenix; Editing
by Bill Tarrant and Diane Craft)
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