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2018 Arizona teachers' strike

The 2018 Arizona teachers' strike was held from April 26–May 3, 2018, by 20,000 teachers to protest low pay and cuts to school funding.[1] Arizona Governor Doug Ducey had approved a proposal giving a 20 percent raise to teachers by 2020, with a 9 percent raise in 2019; teachers rejected this proposal as it did not provide increased funding for schools themselves or raises for support staff.[2] It coincided with a similar strike in neighboring Colorado.

2018 Arizona teachers' walkout
Part of the 2018–19 education workers' strikes in the United States
Teachers rally on Washington Street in Phoenix
DateApril 26, 2018 – May 3, 2018
Location
Caused by
Goals
  • 20% salary raise for teachers by 2020
  • Decrease of the student:teacher ratio to 23:1
Methods
Resulted in
  • 20% salary raise for teachers by 2020
  • 9% raise for teachers in 2018–19 school year
  • subsequent 5% raises for the next two years
  • Increased support staff salaries
Parties
Arizona Education Association & Arizona Educators United
Lead figures

Joe Thomas
Marisol Garcia
Noah Karvelis
Kelley Fisher
Rebecca Garelli
Derek Harris
Dylan Wegela
Wes Oswald
Jay Barbuto
Vanessa Arredondo

Number
70,000 educators

The walkout occurred after similar actions in West Virginia and Oklahoma, and was the third in a wave of teachers' strikes in the United States. It was the first such action by teachers in Arizona.[3]

The strike ended on May 3, 2018, when the Government of Arizona conceded to increase funding to increase salaries for support staff and to decrease student to counselor ratios.[4]

Background edit

Teachers began holding "walk-ins" the week of April 9th, during which they protested in favor of increased funding while on school campuses, and discussed the reasons for the protests with parents and interested parties.[5][6] Teachers also wore red to school to indicate solidarity.[7] These protests were organized by Arizona Educators United, and were planned in part on social media.

Arizona lawmakers originally offered teachers a 1 percent raise in 2018, with an additional 1 percent raise in 2019. Doug Ducey, the Arizona governor, further indicated that demands for a 20 percent raise were unlikely to be satisfied, and that there would be no increase in taxes to increase education spending.[6]

Contradicting his earlier statements, Ducey announced on April 13 that there would be a 20 percent raise for teachers in the form of a 10 percent raise in 2019 and a 10 percent raise in 2020, and that $1 billion in funding cut over the past decade would be restored. When announced, Ducey did not discuss how the increases would be funded.[8] The announcement was met with skepticism from labor organizers.[8]

State of education funding in Arizona edit

Before the walkout, teachers' salaries in 2018 were between $8000 and $9000 lower than teachers' salaries in 1990, when adjusted for inflation.[6] Wages for teachers in Arizona were some of the lowest in the United States, averaging $48,372 per year at the time.[3] In 2017, Arizona ranked last of all fifty states for average elementary school pay, and second to last for teacher pay at the secondary level.[9] Since the Great Recession, funding in the state had been cut by 14 percent.[6] Cuts had been further exacerbated by the privatization trend in the state, which had led to job insecurity.[10]

Walkout edit

Teachers voted on April 19 to begin a walkout on April 26. Of the 57,000 individuals who voted, 78 percent were in favor of a walkout. The decision to walk out was in part precipitated by an unstable plan to fund governor Ducey's proposal from earlier in April, which would have created a $265 million deficit after its rollout.[2] During the walkout, teachers organized various events, both to discuss their motivations with the public and to guarantee students reliant on subsidized meals still received food.[11]

On May 1, teachers agreed to end the walkout if Arizona lawmakers passed a new budget with both raises and increased spending on schools.[11] The strike officially ended after the budget was passed on May 3.[12]

Demands edit

AEU demands include a 20 percent raise for all teachers and staff during the 2018–2019 school year, the return of funding to pre-Recession levels, and a decrease in class size to a student to teacher ratio of 23:1.[13]

Responses from state officials edit

Democratic legislators in the Arizona House endorsed the planned walkout.[14] Rebecca Rios referred to it as "brave and righteous". Governor Ducey, on Twitter, condemned the results of the vote, expressing fears that students would be "...the ones who lose out..." if the walkout occurred.

References edit

  1. ^ Gonzales, Richard (20 April 2018). "Arizona Teachers Vote To Strike, Sparking Statewide Walkout". NPR. Retrieved 20 April 2018.
  2. ^ a b "Arizona Teachers Vote for Statewide Walkout". The New York Times. 20 April 2018. Retrieved 20 April 2018.
  3. ^ a b Bowden, John (20 April 2018). "Arizona teachers to walk out in first-ever statewide strike". The Hill. Retrieved 20 April 2018.
  4. ^ Snow, Anita; Tang, Terry (May 3, 2018). "Arizona teachers end walkout after governor signs off on 20 percent raise". Chicago Tribune. tronc. Retrieved May 3, 2018.
  5. ^ Emma, Caitlin (12 April 2018). "Teachers Are Going on Strike in Trump's America". Politico. Retrieved 20 April 2018.
  6. ^ a b c d Kuhn, Casey (11 April 2018). "Arizona Teachers 'Walk-In' To Protest Low Pay And Low Funding". NPR. Retrieved 20 April 2018.
  7. ^ Kilgore, Ed (20 April 2018). "The Spring of Discontent for Red-State Teachers Continues". New York Magazine. Retrieved 20 April 2018.
  8. ^ a b Fernández Campbell, Alexia (13 April 2018). "Arizona's governor promises to give teachers a pay raise in effort to avert a strike". Vox. Retrieved 20 April 2018.
  9. ^ "US: Arizona teachers vote for first-ever statewide strike". Al Jazeera. 20 April 2018. Retrieved 20 April 2018.
  10. ^ Blanc, Eric (30 April 2018). "Arizona Versus the Privatizers". Jacobin. Retrieved 1 May 2018.
  11. ^ a b Christie, Bob (1 May 2018). "Arizona teachers vow to end strike if funding plan passes". The Houston Chronicle. Retrieved 2 May 2018.
  12. ^ "Striking Arizona teachers win 19% raise, end walkout". Los Angeles Times. 3 May 2018. Retrieved 4 May 2018.
  13. ^ "We demand..." AEU. Retrieved 20 April 2018.
  14. ^ "The Latest: Arizona House Democrats support walkout vote". WTOP. 20 April 2018. Retrieved 20 April 2018.

2018, arizona, teachers, strike, held, from, april, 2018, teachers, protest, cuts, school, funding, arizona, governor, doug, ducey, approved, proposal, giving, percent, raise, teachers, 2020, with, percent, raise, 2019, teachers, rejected, this, proposal, prov. The 2018 Arizona teachers strike was held from April 26 May 3 2018 by 20 000 teachers to protest low pay and cuts to school funding 1 Arizona Governor Doug Ducey had approved a proposal giving a 20 percent raise to teachers by 2020 with a 9 percent raise in 2019 teachers rejected this proposal as it did not provide increased funding for schools themselves or raises for support staff 2 It coincided with a similar strike in neighboring Colorado 2018 Arizona teachers walkoutPart of the 2018 19 education workers strikes in the United StatesTeachers rally on Washington Street in PhoenixDateApril 26 2018 May 3 2018LocationArizonaCaused byOngoing education cuts since the Great RecessionGoals20 salary raise for teachers by 2020 Decrease of the student teacher ratio to 23 1MethodsOccupation Demonstrations Internet activism WalkoutResulted in20 salary raise for teachers by 2020 9 raise for teachers in 2018 19 school year subsequent 5 raises for the next two years Increased support staff salariesPartiesArizona Education Association amp Arizona Educators United Government of ArizonaLead figuresJoe ThomasMarisol GarciaNoah KarvelisKelley FisherRebecca GarelliDerek HarrisDylan WegelaWes OswaldJay BarbutoVanessa Arredondo Doug DuceyMichele ReaganJ D MesnardTJ ShopeJohn AllenKelly TownsendRebecca RiosSteve YarbroughJohn KavanaghKimberly YeeKatie HobbsNumber70 000 educatorsThe walkout occurred after similar actions in West Virginia and Oklahoma and was the third in a wave of teachers strikes in the United States It was the first such action by teachers in Arizona 3 The strike ended on May 3 2018 when the Government of Arizona conceded to increase funding to increase salaries for support staff and to decrease student to counselor ratios 4 Contents 1 Background 1 1 State of education funding in Arizona 2 Walkout 2 1 Demands 2 2 Responses from state officials 3 ReferencesBackground editTeachers began holding walk ins the week of April 9th during which they protested in favor of increased funding while on school campuses and discussed the reasons for the protests with parents and interested parties 5 6 Teachers also wore red to school to indicate solidarity 7 These protests were organized by Arizona Educators United and were planned in part on social media Arizona lawmakers originally offered teachers a 1 percent raise in 2018 with an additional 1 percent raise in 2019 Doug Ducey the Arizona governor further indicated that demands for a 20 percent raise were unlikely to be satisfied and that there would be no increase in taxes to increase education spending 6 Contradicting his earlier statements Ducey announced on April 13 that there would be a 20 percent raise for teachers in the form of a 10 percent raise in 2019 and a 10 percent raise in 2020 and that 1 billion in funding cut over the past decade would be restored When announced Ducey did not discuss how the increases would be funded 8 The announcement was met with skepticism from labor organizers 8 State of education funding in Arizona edit Before the walkout teachers salaries in 2018 were between 8000 and 9000 lower than teachers salaries in 1990 when adjusted for inflation 6 Wages for teachers in Arizona were some of the lowest in the United States averaging 48 372 per year at the time 3 In 2017 Arizona ranked last of all fifty states for average elementary school pay and second to last for teacher pay at the secondary level 9 Since the Great Recession funding in the state had been cut by 14 percent 6 Cuts had been further exacerbated by the privatization trend in the state which had led to job insecurity 10 Walkout editTeachers voted on April 19 to begin a walkout on April 26 Of the 57 000 individuals who voted 78 percent were in favor of a walkout The decision to walk out was in part precipitated by an unstable plan to fund governor Ducey s proposal from earlier in April which would have created a 265 million deficit after its rollout 2 During the walkout teachers organized various events both to discuss their motivations with the public and to guarantee students reliant on subsidized meals still received food 11 On May 1 teachers agreed to end the walkout if Arizona lawmakers passed a new budget with both raises and increased spending on schools 11 The strike officially ended after the budget was passed on May 3 12 Demands edit AEU demands include a 20 percent raise for all teachers and staff during the 2018 2019 school year the return of funding to pre Recession levels and a decrease in class size to a student to teacher ratio of 23 1 13 Responses from state officials edit Democratic legislators in the Arizona House endorsed the planned walkout 14 Rebecca Rios referred to it as brave and righteous Governor Ducey on Twitter condemned the results of the vote expressing fears that students would be the ones who lose out if the walkout occurred References edit Gonzales Richard 20 April 2018 Arizona Teachers Vote To Strike Sparking Statewide Walkout NPR Retrieved 20 April 2018 a b Arizona Teachers Vote for Statewide Walkout The New York Times 20 April 2018 Retrieved 20 April 2018 a b Bowden John 20 April 2018 Arizona teachers to walk out in first ever statewide strike The Hill Retrieved 20 April 2018 Snow Anita Tang Terry May 3 2018 Arizona teachers end walkout after governor signs off on 20 percent raise Chicago Tribune tronc Retrieved May 3 2018 Emma Caitlin 12 April 2018 Teachers Are Going on Strike in Trump s America Politico Retrieved 20 April 2018 a b c d Kuhn Casey 11 April 2018 Arizona Teachers Walk In To Protest Low Pay And Low Funding NPR Retrieved 20 April 2018 Kilgore Ed 20 April 2018 The Spring of Discontent for Red State Teachers Continues New York Magazine Retrieved 20 April 2018 a b Fernandez Campbell Alexia 13 April 2018 Arizona s governor promises to give teachers a pay raise in effort to avert a strike Vox Retrieved 20 April 2018 US Arizona teachers vote for first ever statewide strike Al Jazeera 20 April 2018 Retrieved 20 April 2018 Blanc Eric 30 April 2018 Arizona Versus the Privatizers Jacobin Retrieved 1 May 2018 a b Christie Bob 1 May 2018 Arizona teachers vow to end strike if funding plan passes The Houston Chronicle Retrieved 2 May 2018 Striking Arizona teachers win 19 raise end walkout Los Angeles Times 3 May 2018 Retrieved 4 May 2018 We demand AEU Retrieved 20 April 2018 The Latest Arizona House Democrats support walkout vote WTOP 20 April 2018 Retrieved 20 April 2018 nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to 2018 Arizona teachers strike Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 2018 Arizona teachers 27 strike amp oldid 1179829086, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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