West Virginia Teacher Unions Plan Saturday Protests as Senate Readies Work on Education Reform

With West Virginia Senate President Mitch Carmichael planning to address public education during a one-day special legislative session this weekend, leaders of teacher unions are gearing up to have their members at the Capitol.

 

A Senate spokeswoman says Carmichael and his members will begin work at 10 a.m. Saturday, June 1, to consider the 144-page “Student Success Act.”

 

The bill would boost school employee pay, create an open enrollment policy for counties, provide mental health training for teachers and allow for charter schools, among other reforms.

 

Leaders of the American Federation of Teachers-West Virginia, the West Virginia Education Association and the West Virginia School Service Personnel Association have called on their members to be there as the “Student Success Act” is being considered.

 

The groups are opposed to some of the bill’s proposals, including charter schools, a change to how layoffs would be considered and withholding pay during a strike.

 

West Virginia Education Association president Dale Lee said he hopes action on Saturday sends a message to those in leadership.

 

“It says that educators are watching and they feel as though Senator Carmichael and his cronies are listening to outside interests rather than the people of West Virginia,” Lee said. “West Virginians have made it clear — 88 percent are against charter schools.”

 

But once Saturday rolls along, that protest will be different than similar actions held in recent years. Earlier this year, teachers across the state walked off the job to oppose Senate Bill 451 — a long, sweeping and controversial bill that ultimately failed. With schools now out for the summer around the state, a rally wouldn’t be a strike, but rather a show of force on their own time.

 

“I think it’s always impactful when you see faces of people who are going to be affected by legislation if it is considered or passed,” AFT-West Virginia president Fred Albert said. “There is nothing that takes the place of human contact and having people be there with their bodies and spirits.”

 

Senate Democrats unveiled their own, separate proposals for an education overhaul earlier this month. Their emphasis is on mental health services, teacher pay and vocational training. Democrats have called on Carmichael and the Republican majority to to consider each proposed reform on its own merit.

 

House Speaker Roger Hanshaw split his chamber into four select committees on education during a one-day return to the Capitol last week. He’s said the House will not return to work until June 17, which would overlap with interim committee meetings.

 

With the House delaying action on education, Lee said he doesn’t understand Carmichael’s timing and intention of a quick session.

 

“I’m stunned that he wants to complete it in a day. You would think he would wait until interims when the House was in,” he said. “Or, you would think he would separate the bill and deal with the things that could be be passed and deal with the contentious items later.”

 

With the House waiting until June, union leaders such as Albert say they are ready to keep them engaged and block Carmichael’s bill from moving forward.

 

“If the House doesn’t come back in until later in June, I would imagine our members would want to be there,” Albert said. “I wouldn’t expect them to lose their desire to be involved.”

 

Carmichael has scheduled a Thursday morning press conference to discuss the Student Success Act.

 
Correction: An earlier version of this story incorrectly stated that charter schools would be limited to four. In fact, public higher education institutions would be limited to authorizing four charter schools. County school boards would not be limited in the number of charter schools they could authorize. 

West Virginia Education Forums Set to Start

West Virginia education officials are kicking off a series of public hearings as part of preparations for an upcoming special legislative session. The first of seven forums is set for Monday night at Cabell Midland High School in Ona.

Others forums this week are scheduled for Tuesday night at Mount View High School in Welch, Wednesday at Capital High in Charleston and Thursday at Woodrow Wilson High in Beckley.

Three final forums will be held in early April in Clarksburg, Wheeling, and Berkeley Springs.

Each forum will start at 6:00 in the evening and will include discussions in small groups on core education issues.

Gov. Jim Justice called the special session to address teacher pay raises and other education issues. He asked legislators to meet with teachers, parents and other stakeholders before returning to Charleston later this year.

President of the West Virginia Education Association Dale Lee said the WVEA will also be holding its own set of educational town halls in all seventeen of West Virginia’s Senatorial districts.

National Education Association Meets to Discuss Common Core, Standardized Tests

Educators from across the country are meeting over the next two weeks for the National Education Association’s 152nd annual meeting. West Virginia Education Association President Dale Lee will be one of the Educators at the meeting discussing issues facing such as Common Core State Standards, and standardized testing.

Two major thoughts the state’s Education Association president Dale Lee offered when reflecting on the state of public education in West Virginia:

  1. Improving education is going to take more investment to effectively implement.
  2. It will take time to see the fruits of those labors.

Competitive Salaries

“I think we’re moving in the right direction,” he said. “Our graduation rate is on the rise, our teachers are getting more and more education, now it becomes a question of paying them competitive salaries to keep them in the state.”

Lee says, on that front, a state-wide Competitive Salary campaign has the support of 52 of the 55 county boards of education.

Standardized Testing

There’s been mounting concern throughout the state as well as the country over the efficacy of standardized testing. Lee reports that teachers are increasingly frustrated with test-driven curriculum.

“We’re just testing kids to death,” Lee said. He says teachers need the time to teach lessons as opposed to preparing students for certain tests.

“To have everything based on a single test score is just the wrong way for an education system. We need to broaden our curriculum and not teach every kid like they are going to go to college and be an engineer,” Lee said.

Common Core

Another topic of discussion at the National Education Association’s meeting will be the Common Core Standards, a newer wave of education benchmarks for English/language arts, and math adopted by 43 states and the District of Columbia, four territories and the Defense Department. The National Governor’s Association led the effort to create the standards in an effort to provide a clear, consistent understanding of what students are expected to learn. The Standards aim to align schools in preparing students with the knowledge and skills required for successful entry into college and careers. West Virginia has already begun implementing the standards.  

“One of the complaints that I’ve heard is that we haven’t done a good job of giving the proper training to implement Common Core, or the time and resources to do it, and do it correctly,” said Lee.

Lee says next year testing will begin to evaluate how well students are learning those new standards. But he stresses that test scores won’t be a reliable reflection of student achievement until they are taken by kids who have had several years of experience with the new standards. He says reliable data could take four to eight years to see.

State Senator Pulls Ad with WVEA Head Promoting Business

A southern West Virginia lawmaker has pulled a television ad for his car dealership that featured a testimonial by the president of the state’s largest teachers’ union.
 
Sen. Bill Cole says he stopped running the commercial on Monday. The Mercer County Republican says West Virginia Education Association President Dale Lee is a longtime customer.
 
Lee says he asked Cole to drop the ad after ethics questions arose at the Capitol. Cole says he didn’t realize there could be potential ethics issues.
 
State ethics law prohibits public officials from using their office for the private gain of an individual or business.
 
In the ad, Lee touts his personal experience buying cars from Cole’s dealership. Lee and Cole say Lee wasn’t compensated to appear in the ad.
 

WVEA wants higher salaries from lawmakers

The state’s largest teacher’s union announced a new initiative pushing for a competitive salary for teachers and school personnel. Union leaders call the…

The state’s largest teacher’s union announced a new initiative pushing for a competitive salary for teachers and school personnel. Union leaders call the pay increase the next step in improving public education and student achievement across West Virginia.
The West Virginia Education Association kicked off the “Competitive Pay Campaign” at their Charleston headquarters.

West Virginia currently ranks 48th in the nation in teacher pay at an annual salary of $45,000.

While WVEA President Dale Lee declined to put a dollar amount on what the union considers a competitive salary, he said it should be a major priority for lawmakers despite a struggling state economy.

“It’s not our job to find the resources for them, but it is their job to place a priority,” Lee said during a press conference. “This has to become a priority and anything up at the Capitol that they make a priority they are able to find the funding for it.”

Lee said every $1,000 raise for teachers would cost the state more than $26 million.

He said implementing a multi-year program would allow the state more time to find some of that amount while catching West Virginia teacher up with the national average of $55,000 a year.
 

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