Republican lawmakers threaten to jail Colorado teachers if they strike

88m3

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Republican lawmakers threaten to jail Colorado teachers if they strike
Teachers could face hundreds of dollars in fines, jail time, or both.
ELHAM KHATAMI APR 23, 2018, 1:33 PM


SB18-264, would prohibit public school teachers and unions from participating in or organizing a strike. If a strike is planned, the school would be authorized to seek an injunction from the district court. Teachers who violate the injunction would be “punished with fines or up to 6 months in county jail, or both.” The legislation would also allow a public school to fire teachers who do not comply with the injunction.

The bill was introduced last Friday, just as teachers in the southern city of Pueblo, Colorado voted to go on strike, and informed state legislators of their plans to do so. If Colorado’s education and labor agency doesn’t intervene by the first week of May by trying to reach a resolution, teachers could go on strike as early as May 4. If the agency does intervene, however, discussions to broker a deal could last up to 180 days.

Teachers elsewhere in the state are planning walkouts for Thursday and Friday, with some school districts planning to close because of the planned protest. Their actions follow last Monday’s protest at the state Capitol, where hundreds of teachers called for raises and for protection of their retirement benefits.

COLORADO EDUCATORS FILE INTO THE COLORADO STATE CAPITOL TO MEET WITH LEGISLATORS TO CALL FOR INCREASED EDUCATION FUNDING ON APRIL 16, 2018 IN DENVER, COLORADO. (CREDIT: RJ SANGOSTI/THE DENVER POST VIA GETTY IMAGES)
Bill sponsor Sen. Bob Gardner (R) cited Colorado’s already restrictive strike laws in defending the legislation to KOAA News 5.

“It is already against the law in Colorado for state employees to strike, so this is just an addition to that,” Gardner said. “The idea that it interferes with their First Amendment right is just absurd.”

Pueblo Education Association President Suzanne Ethredge told KOAA News 5 that she was “shocked by the harshness of the language that is in this bill. I think it’s very dangerous for teachers across the country. They would no longer be able to assert their right to strike, their right to speak out if conditions warrant it.”

What all the states where teachers are striking have in common
While the measure has little chance of becoming law, its introduction points to the stark differences between the views of those in power and the rest of the country. A recent poll by The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research found that most Americans don’t think teachers make enough money, with half of the respondents saying they’d be willing to pay higher taxes to grant teachers a raise.

Colorado is the latest state that has become a battleground for education funding in recent weeks. Teachers in West Virginia, Oklahoma, Kentucky, and Arizona have also organized strikes and walkouts for the same reasons. In many of these states, school funding is far below what it was before the Great Recession of 2008.

According to a 2017 report by the National Education Association, Colorado ranks 46th in the country when it comes to average teacher salaries and 49th when it comes to the average salary of other instructional staff.

And as local ABC affiliate Denver7 reported last week, despite the increase in the number of students in Colorado schools over the past two years, schools have not seen increases in education funding. Indeed, Colorado ranks 42nd in the United State with respect to funds spent per student, Denver7 reported, well below the national average by about $2,500.


Republican lawmakers threaten to jail Colorado teachers if they strike

sigh
 

Secure Da Bag

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This is getting way out of control.

What is "getting way out of control"?

The amount of walk-outs (ie. you can't believe this many teachers are underpaid)?

The fact that teachers are doing walk-outs (ie. you think the teachers are at fault)?

or....

The fact that the state isn't paying these teachers proper wages (ie. states mostly run by republicans have not been doing very good revenue allocation)?


Pick: one, some, or all. @DEAD7
 
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The amount of walk-outs (ie. you can't believe this many teachers are underpaid)?

The fact that teachers are doing walk-outs (ie. you think the teachers are at fault)?

or....

The fact that the state isn't paying these teachers proper wages (ie. states mostly run by republicans have not been doing very good revenue allocation)?
The fact a compromise can’t be reached and children are being leveraged.



I’d like to see teacher pensions reduced(or axed completely) and their base pay raised significantly as a compromise.
:yeshrug:


Sad truth though, is the citizenry doesn’t value education like it should and isn’t willing to get behind paying teachers more.
In red states especially strikes like this further damage the perception of teachers because they are basically strong arming taxpayers saying “increase funding/wages or your kids won’t be educated”.
I believe some demographics respond poorly to that sort of thing.
:yeshrug:

Edit: don’t be shocked if the rethugs stay in office and even gain seats:mjlol:
 
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The fact a compromise can’t be reached and children are being leveraged.



I’d like to see teacher pensions reduced(or axed completely) and their base pay raised significantly as a compromise.
:yeshrug:


Sad truth though, is the citizenry doesn’t value education like it should and isn’t willing to get behind paying teachers more.
In red states especially strikes like this further damage the perception of teachers because they are basically strong arming taxpayers saying “increase funding/wages or your kids won’t be educated”.
I believe some demographics respond poorly to that sort of thing.
:yeshrug:

It's not even the fact that the teachers are underpaid (which they are). It's also the fact that the schools themselves are underfunded. Those pictures from Oklahoma are quite telling.

In terms of demographics, it's white teachers (mostly) griping to white lawmakers (mostly) and white parents (mostly) also feeling the pain. The white teachers and white parents should be on the same page. Since they are seeing the same thing. Also, both groups know that lawmakers are sending their kids to private (or maybe now charter) schools which don't have those problems.
 
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DEAD7

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It's not even the fact that the teachers are underpaid (which they are). It's also the fact that the schools themselves are funded. Those pictures from Oklahoma are quite telling.

In terms of demographics, it's white teachers (mostly) griping to white lawmakers (mostly) and white parents (mostly) also feeling the pain. The white teachers and white parents should be on the same page. Since they are seeing the same thing. Also, both groups know that lawmakers are sending their kids to private (or maybe now charter) schools which don't have those problems.
No lies detected, but for some reason this never really translates over to Republican losses...
I think it goes back to people not really valuing educators.
 

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No lies detected, but for some reason this never really translates over to Republican losses...
I think it goes back to people not really valuing educators.

Part of me doesn't want to believe that. But then I think back to when Fox News was attacking teachers a few years ago. Maybe you're right. :francis:
 

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It's not even the fact that the teachers are underpaid (which they are). It's also the fact that the schools themselves are funded. Those pictures from Oklahoma are quite telling.

In terms of demographics, it's white teachers (mostly) griping to white lawmakers (mostly) and white parents (mostly) also feeling the pain. The white teachers and white parents should be on the same page. Since they are seeing the same thing. Also, both groups know that lawmakers are sending their kids to private (or maybe now charter) schools which don't have those problems.

Public Servants Are Losing Their Foothold in the Middle Class

Does this bother you?
 

fact

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How you gonna ROFL with a hollow back?
The fact a compromise can’t be reached and children are being leveraged.



I’d like to see teacher pensions reduced(or axed completely) and their base pay raised significantly as a compromise.
:yeshrug:


Sad truth though, is the citizenry doesn’t value education like it should and isn’t willing to get behind paying teachers more.
In red states especially strikes like this further damage the perception of teachers because they are basically strong arming taxpayers saying “increase funding/wages or your kids won’t be educated”.
I believe some demographics respond poorly to that sort of thing.

:yeshrug:
Only if the voters are dumb enough to not realize that there is in fact enough money, but the budget is a fukking mess because special interest groups with big pockets decide where the money gets allocated. These lawmakers are fukked, I don’t recall the last time the teachers unions have flexed nationwide the way they been going the last couple of months. This country is in complete fukking chaos. You repubs/libertarians have been yapping for sooo fukking long about “get us in power, we will set the country straight”, now you have ALL branches of government, and not only couldn’t manage a flag frisbee league, you are still blaming democrats. What we are living through right now is a clown show.
 
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