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.

State School Board Proposes Lowering Teacher Requirements

The West Virginia Board of Education has proposed lowering some requirements to become a public school teacher.

The Charleston Gazette-Mail reported Saturday that among the proposed changes are exempting education bachelor’s degree holders who meet minimum grade point averages from having to pass a basic knowledge test.

Another change would be no longer requiring non-education master’s degree holders within “five years of directly related work experience” to pass a content knowledge test to teach the subject they hold a master’s in.

Other changes concern teacher licensure tests.

State Schools Superintendent Steve Paine says the proposed changes add more flexibility to help fill job positions without compromising quality.

All of the proposed changes can be found online at wvde.state.wv.us/policies. The official public comment period ends 4 p.m. Oct. 10.

West Virginia Teacher of the Year Finalists Announced

Six West Virginia educators have been chosen for Teacher of the Year award.

The West Virginia Department of Education announced Wednesday that the finalists are Teresa Thorne of Slanesville Elementary School in Hampshire County, Tammy Ann Spangler of Ripley Middle School in Jackson County, Kaitlin Thorsell of Washington High School in Jefferson County, Tammy J. Bittorf of Berkeley Springs High School in Morgan County, Adriane L. Manning of Wheeling Middle School in Ohio County and Leslie Lively of Short Line School in Wetzel County.

The Teacher of the Year will be announced during a ceremony on Sept. 18 at the Clay Center in Charleston. The recipient will represent West Virginia at the national level.

Senate Bill Removes Remnants of Common Core in W.Va.

A bill to prohibit any Common Core-based education standards from being taught in West Virginia classrooms was taken up in the Senate’s Education committee Saturday. The standards have been debated for years at the statehouse and now lawmakers are looking at legislation that specifies what can be taught.

Common Core education standards have been a central point of debate in the West Virginia Legislature for years now.

In December 2015, the West Virginia Board of Education responded to concerns raised by both lawmakers and members of the public over the standards and voted to repeal them. They were replaced with the current education standards taught in West Virginia schools – the West Virginia College and Career Ready Standards.

These new standards were the result of an 8-month study led by state Superintendent Dr. Michael Martirano who consulted with West Virginia teachers, higher education officials, as well as members of the public.

But during the 2016 state Legislative session, lawmakers were still concerned – saying the West Virginia College and Career Ready Standards were too similar to Common Core.

This year, lawmakers are attempting again to get rid of any remnants of Common Core with Senate Bill 524.

The bill prohibits Common Core based standards in West Virginia schools, and requires teachers to use two specific sets of standards in their place:  math standards from California adopted in 1997 and English-Language Arts standards from Massachusetts adopted in 2001.

Republican Senator Patricia Rucker from Jefferson County is the bill’s lead sponsor and a former educator. She says it’s important West Virginia get rid of Common Core and bring in something that’s been nationally recognized and proven to work.

“Massachusetts is nationally recognized as one of the best school systems; California, same thing,” Rucker said, “Both of these standards are before Common Core. No one can say that it has any relationship to Common Core, so we are making the constituents happy.”

Another requirement in the bill is that these new standards be implemented for at least five years, starting on July 1, 2017. Rucker says that’s so that both teachers and students have continuity.

“I know administrators; they have been told to do this, this year, something else the next year, something else the next year; they want stability, so that’s one of the reasons the bill says, we’re going to keep these standards for five years,” she noted.

However, if any changes are proposed to the standards within that timeframe, a 60-day written comment period would be required and at least four public hearings in various locations around the state.

Surprisingly, after the years of heated debates over anything related to Common Core, there were no questions or discussion in committee Saturday. However, a handful of senators did vote not to advance the bill.

Senate Bill 524 now goes to the full chamber for consideration.

March 7, 1990: Public School Teachers Strike

On March 7, 1990, thousands of West Virginia public school teachers—involving 47 of the state’s 55 counties—began an 11-day strike. They were protesting what were then among the lowest salaries in the nation. Timed to coincide with the end of the legislative session, it was the first statewide teachers’ strike in West Virginia history.

The work stoppage occurred after the teachers failed to agree on a new pay package with the governor’s office and legislature. The strike ended on March 17, when House Speaker Chuck Chambers, Senate President Keith Burdette, and teachers’ union leaders reached a settlement. The legislative leaders—with the support of Governor Gaston Caperton—agreed to improve teachers’ pay and to develop short-term and long-term plans for public education.

Governor Caperton initiated a series of town-hall-style meetings across the state to discuss the future of education, and, in August, the legislature met in special session to address the issue.

Over the next three years, teachers’ salaries were increased, faculty senates were established in each school, and new teacher training and support programs were developed to promote better classroom instruction.

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