蜜桃影视

Explore

Analysis: States and Districts May Not Be Ready to Spend $122B in Rescue Plan Funds, But the Unions Are. Get Ready for More School Hiring

NEA President Becky Pringle and AFT President Randi Weingarten (California Teachers Association and Getty Images)

Mike Antonucci鈥檚 Union Report appears most Wednesdays; see the full archive.

We are still a long way from getting all of America鈥檚 schoolchildren back into classrooms five days a week, but it鈥檚 clear that the tide has turned in favor of reopening. , the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has recommended lifting of many restrictions, and even Randi Weingarten, president of the American Federation of Teachers, , albeit not until the fall.

We were unprepared for abrupt school closures in March 2020, and we were unprepared for the long and difficult battle to get them reopened. It seems to me we are again unprepared for what comes next.

The teachers unions, however, are prepared.

When the pandemic struck, they wasted no time developing collective bargaining strategies for the conduct of online instruction. The National Education Association 鈥 just a couple of weeks after the very first shutdowns. When the conversation shifted to reopening schools, AFT produced 鈥溾 in April 2020. The following month, the California Teachers Association sent its local affiliates a , in which it declared, 鈥淣ow is the time to secure language improvements that we have wanted for some time.鈥

The federal American Rescue Plan secured , to be used for a variety of purposes, the first of which is to ensure classroom safety. But the money can also be used to hire teachers and support employees, along with new staff for programs to deal with learning loss due to the pandemic.

At the outset, the primary focus will be on safety. As more employees and students are vaccinated, and it becomes more accepted that time-consuming and costly mitigation measures such as , less money will be spent on sanitizing the classroom and more on personnel and projects.

We are already seeing union campaigns to boost hiring, even though the much-predicted teacher exodus never materialized. In fact, .

NEA and AFT continue to stoke fears of a teacher shortage. 鈥淎s the nation鈥檚 public schools struggle with a looming teacher shortage that has only been exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic, one of the best indicators of attracting and retaining teachers is looking at the starting and average salaries for the profession,鈥 said NEA President Becky Pringle on .

It鈥檚 mind-boggling that Pringle could make such a shortage claim when the very report she touts shows 鈥減ublic school enrollment is down by 0.5 percent, average daily student attendance has decreased by an estimated 1.1 percent and the number of K-12 classroom teachers has increased by 4.6 percent.鈥

Despite this boost in the number of teachers 鈥 most of whom we can presume entered at the lower end of the pay scale 鈥 the average teacher salary nationwide increased by 2.9 percent.

About 80 cents of every dollar spent on K-12 public education goes toward employee salaries and benefits. , through fat and lean years, and multiple changes in political party representation in the presidency, Congress, state legislatures and governorships. It鈥檚 a sure bet that if you appropriate an additional dollar for public schools, whatever your intended purpose, 80 cents of it will be spent on hiring new employees and/or increasing the compensation for the ones you have. The unions will ensure that trend continues, even in the absence of justification.

Did you use this article in your work?

We鈥檇 love to hear how 蜜桃影视鈥檚 reporting is helping educators, researchers, and policymakers.

Republish This Article

We want our stories to be shared as widely as possible 鈥 for free.

Please view 蜜桃影视's republishing terms.





On 蜜桃影视 Today