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posted by martyb on Monday April 16 2018, @01:36PM   Printer-friendly
from the going-nationwide dept.

Common Dreams reports

Colorado's teachers' union expects more than 400 teachers at a rally that's planned for Monday at the state's Capitol in Denver.

[...] Englewood School District, outside the capital city, announced on Sunday that schools would be closed the following day as 70 percent of its teachers had indicated they wouldn't be working Monday. It was unclear on Sunday whether more school districts would be closing.

"We are calling Monday, April 16th a day of action", Kerrie Dallman, president of the Colorado Education Association (CEA), told KDVR in Denver.

[...] According to[1] KMGH in Denver, "The CEA estimates that teachers spend on average $656 of their own money for school supplies for students." The state's teacher salaries rank 46th out of 50, with educators making an average of $46,000 per year.

Public schools are underfunded by $828 million this year, Dallman told the Post, and lawmakers have said they could inject at least $100 million more into schools--but they have yet to do so.

[...] The planned protest follows a trend that was seen in West Virginia and Kentucky before moving west this month to Oklahoma and Arizona as well as Colorado. In all the states where teachers have walked out and rallied at their Capitols, teachers have reported paying for school supplies out of pocket, working second and third jobs to make ends meet, and coping with funding shortages while their legislators hand out tax cuts to corporations.

[1] For a laugh (or perhaps a deep sigh), check out all the whitespace in the source code of the page.


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Monday April 16 2018, @05:55PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday April 16 2018, @05:55PM (#667727)

    Don't forget, that is a SCHOOL year, not a calendar year.
    9 months, not 12.
    If they choose to do nothing for pay the other 3 months, then that is on them.

    I'm not sure why this was modded troll. It's a valid point. If I took off my entire summer and didn't work, I would cut my pay by 25%. When I was a kid, it was common to see teachers from my school doing seasonal jobs in the summer. Spreading paychecks over 12 months only helps those that can't budget and reduces their mandated tax withholdings. It doesn't mean they are suddenly "employed" over the summer.