NC Teachers Descend on State Capital, Demanding Funding for Schools, Better Pay

At least 20,000 North Carolina teachers, in #RedforEd T-shirts, descended on the state capital building in Raleigh on May 16. 

They demanded more funding for schools so they can teach their kids, better pay for themselves and support staffers, and an end to the corporate tax cuts that robbed Tar Heel state schools of money for at least the past decade.

So many North Carolina teachers walked out, went to Raleigh, or both, that half the schools in the state, covering two-thirds of the students, had to close. Other unions, led by the state AFL-CIO, supported the walkout – which really was the lobby day of the North Carolina Association of Educators (NCAE), a National Education Association affiliate. 

“What they’ve been doing to our public schools is not right,” NCAE President Mark Jewell said of the state legislature.

Carolina teachers thus became the latest in a lengthening line of teachers who have taken matters into their own hands and taken to the streets in red states, demanding more funding for schools, better pay for themselves and staff, and guaranteed funding streams for education – including an end to state corporate tax cuts that robbed schools of needed cash.

West Virginia’s teachers started the parade when they were forced to strike for nine days after the GOP-run legislature refused to raise their pay and planned to cut their pensions. They were followed by teachers in Kentucky, Oklahoma and Arizona – plus another massive lobby day by Colorado teachers in the state capital, Denver. All had similar demands, and, except in Oklahoma, won most of them. 

Gov. Roy Cooper (D), greeted the North Carolina teachers by proposing an 8 percent raise and more funds for books, repairs and buying materials. One teacher tweeted a photo of a textbook for elementary schoolers about the presidents. It’s so old kids had to draw in likenesses of every president after Reagan.

But the heavily gerrymandered GOP-run state legislature is another matter. The state House speaker declared Carolina’s teachers got larger raises than any others nationwide during the last two years, and said they should go back to the classroom. 

GOP State Rep. Mike Broady ranted about “teacher union thugs” on a radio call-in show and a long blog. Other Republicans muttered that state law bans public worker strikes. North Carolina is a right-to-work state, the legislature has a veto-proof GOP majority, and its public worker labor law is so bad that a decade ago the national AFL-CIO filed a formal complaint with the International Labour Organization against the state. 

Tax cuts cited by the NCAE have left the state with a 3 percent corporate tax rate while teacher pay is 37th in the U.S., and per pupil spending is lower than that. The state has the biggest say in that, too, as it provides 60 percent of funds for schools, the National Education Association reports. 

“Our students deserve better,” the NCAE said in a statement before the mass demonstration in Raleigh.  “They deserve resources to help make them successful. They deserve professionally paid educators. They deserve safe schools and schools that are not crumbling and in disrepair.”

Filiberto Nolasco Gomez is a former union organizer and former editor of Minneapolis based Workday Minnesota, the first online labor news publication in the state. Filiberto focused on longform and investigative journalism. He has covered topics including prison labor, labor trafficking, and union fights in the Twin Cities.

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