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.

W.Va. Lawmakers Look to Accommodate 5 Percent State Employee Pay Raise in State Budget

Now that teachers and other school employees across West Virginia have returned to the classroom, lawmakers are turning their attention to the budget to pay for 5 percent raises for educators, service personnel – and the salary hike promised for all public employees.

Those in negotiations with Gov. Jim Justice’s office agreed to cut proposed funding to various programs, according to Senate President Mitch Carmichael’s office. The cuts include the governor’s proposed increases to tourism, general services and the state commerce department. Carmichael said Wednesday that Medicaid would likely also take a funding hit.

Those decreases to the budget result from Senate Republicans’ skepticism of Justice’s assurance that the state is expected to take in $58 million more this coming fiscal year. Majority leadership have said that some of the funding to slashed programs would be reinstated if the governor’s revenue projections ring true.

A committee amendment to the Senate’s version of the budget, Senate Bill 152, reflects the negotiated funding changes to accommodate pay raises for all state employees.

Both House and Senate versions of the budget are scheduled to go up for passage Thursday.

W.Va. Will be 'Shut Down' Next Week in Statewide Walkout

Updated Feb. 25 7:30 p.m.

According to the state Department of Education’s website Sunday night ,schools will be closed in at least 51 of West Virginia’s 55 counties Monday.

Original story:

 
A statewide walkout has been announced for teachers and other state employees for Thursday and Friday next week. The announcement was made during a weekend rally at the state Capitol in Charleston.

Christine Campbell, President of the West Virginia chapter of the American Federation of Teachers, stood at a podium on the Capitol steps as she announced the walkout.

An estimated 10,000 teachers, state workers and supporters came out on a cold, rainy Saturday to send a message to their lawmakers. They demanded higher wages and a long-term fix to rising health insurance premiums.

Lisa Stillion is a health science teacher at Wheeling Park High School. She drove from Ohio County to attend the rally and deliver a message to her lawmakers.

“I think what the Legislature is doing is just despicable. We need to vote them out. Get your heads out of your rear ends; be thinking about who you represent. You work for us. We don’t work for you,” she said.

A bill to increase wages for teachers and other state employees has been moving through the legislative process, but after changes made in the House of Delegates, it was moved to a Rules Committee in the Senate last week.

The bill, as it left the House, would raise salaries by two percent in the first year, and then one percent in each of the following three years.

House lawmakers also voted to apply $29 million from the state’s Rainy Day Fund to freeze insurance rates for teachers and state workers for the next fiscal year.

Credit Russ Barbour / West Virginia Public Broadcasting
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West Virginia Public Broadcasting
Teachers and other state employees rallying at the Capitol on Friday, Feb. 16, 2018 while the West Virginia Legislature was in session.

But teachers and other state employees say it isn’t enough. A representative from the United Mine Workers of America, along with several other speakers, encouraged those at the rally to not stand down.

“So let me ask you, are you ready to raise some hell?” asked a UMWA representative, “Are you ready to fight? I said are you ready to fight?”

The West Virginia American Federation of Teachers’ chapter is encouraging all those participating in the walkout to come to the state Capitol to have their voices heard.

House of Delegates Downs Amendments Calling for Bigger Teacher Pay Increases

Editor's Note: This story will be updated. The West Virginia House of Delegates shot down Monday two amendments that would have created bigger pay hikes…

Editor’s Note: This story will be updated.

 

The West Virginia House of Delegates shot down Monday two amendments that would have created bigger pay hikes for teachers.

House Minority Leader Tim Miley proposed an amendment to Senate Bill 267 that called for a 3-percent salary increase this year and 3-percent increases the following two years. The amendment failed on a 42-58 vote.

Republican Delegates Pat McGeehan and Michael Folk proposed an amendment that would have offered a 3-1-1 formula — with a 3-percent hike this year and an additional 1-percent raise the next two years. That amendment was rejected on a 50-50 tie vote.

With those amendments failing, the bill goes up for a vote Tuesday in the House in the form in which it was passed by the lower chamber’s finance committee last week — calling for a 2-1-1-1 formula.

The current version is greater than what originally passed the Senate, which called for a 1-percent increase each year for five years.

At a news conference last week, Gov. Jim Justice said he believed the version passed by the Senate was the best route, with state revenues stabilizing and an uncertain future.

 

Justice Confirms Teacher Insurance Terms Won't Change Soon

Gov. Jim Justice confirms teachers and other West Virginia public employees will see their health insurance coverage unchanged for the next 17 months with…

Gov. Jim Justice confirms teachers and other West Virginia public employees will see their health insurance coverage unchanged for the next 17 months with his administration finding another $29 million to support the cost.

Speaking Thursday at the Capitol, flanked by House Speaker Tim Armstead and Senate President Mitch Carmichael, Justice says they will use that time to try to find ways to support future costs.

Teachers have protested low pay, small proposed raises and insurance rate hikes expected starting July 1.

Justice says it’s prudent right now to stay with his proposal to guarantee teachers 1 percent raises each of the next five years, more later if the state economy keeps improving.

Armstead says House members believe they can sustain 2 percent teacher raises the first year.

West Virginia Senate Approves Small Pay Raise for Teachers

Before a gallery packed with teachers, West Virginia’s Senate approved a bill Friday to give them annual pay raises of 1 percent over a four-year period, a move that both teachers and many senators said wasn’t enough.

The bill passed on a 33-0 vote after a lengthy discussion. One senator was absent.

The bill, which amounts to raises of about $400 per year for teachers starting July 1, now heads to the House of Delegates.

The vote came as teachers from Logan, Mingo and Wyoming counties held a one-day walkout to rally at the Capitol seeking pay raises and better health benefits.

A day earlier, Senate Republicans cited fiscal concerns in rejecting attempts by Democrats for larger pay increases.

During a lengthy discussion before Friday’s vote, Wood County Republican Mike Azinger called the 1 percent raise “reasonable” considering the state’s recent financial challenges.

According to the National Education Association, West Virginia teachers earn an average salary of $45,622, which ranks 48th among the states. The national average is $58,353.

“There is nothing that would thrill me more than to be able to walk out knowing … we got them above the national average,” Kanawha County Republican Tom Takubo said. “But we have to be fiscally responsible.”

Berkeley County Democrat John Unger called the bill an insult.

“It’s like going to a restaurant, ordering a big meal and leaving a penny tip,” Unger said. “It’s a slap in the face, and to me, I’m outraged by this.”

Then he threw a coin into the air: “Here’s my penny tip.”

Greenbrier County Democrat Stephen Baldwin said he voted for the bill “with a very heavy heart, because 1 percent is not enough.”

Baldwin read a letter from a Monroe County teacher who said inflation would eat up the raise, and she brought up the possibility of being forced to move out of state.

“If we’re not careful, we’re going to lose our best and our brightest for good,” Baldwin said.

At the rally, East Chapmanville Elementary reading specialist Gloria Triplett held a sign that read, “My second job bought this sign.” She agreed that the pay increase adopted by the Senate wasn’t enough.

“We want it much higher than 1 percent,” she said.

Teachers also are worried about their insurance premiums, which are scheduled go up on July 1.

Brittany Bauer, an advanced-placement science teacher at Wyoming East High School, said both she and her husband work two jobs. She said she’ll have to come up with an extra $300 per month if the increases go through.

“Three hundred dollars is a lot to come up with,” she said.

At public hearings later this month, the West Virginia Public Employees Insurance Agency finance board will hear Gov. Jim Justice’s proposal to reduce premiums for families that have two state incomes, including teachers. Those premiums would be based on half of their combined state income, resulting in significantly lower premiums compared with the proposed increases.

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