Put an End to 'Broken Promises'

NEA Today, Sep 2005

Delegates to the NEA Representative Assembly send a strong message to lawmakers-do your part by funding great public schools.

They sent thousands of e-mails to members of Congress, raised more than $1.3 million to support pro-public education political candidates, and marched two miles to the office of Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger to protest his budget cuts.

Mostly, the more than 8,000 activist delegates to the 2005 NEA Representative Assembly (RA) in Los Angeles sent a message with their words and their deeds: legislators need to step up and properly fund public schools, just as teachers and education support professionals are pushing to meet higher standards.

NEA President Reg Weaver, who was elected without opposition to another three-year term, hammered home the theme, beginning with a keynote address in which he outlined a six-point "education covenant" between educators and the public (for more, see page 7).

Two days later, delegates raised the cry again during a 90-minute rally on the floor of the RA when delegates from all 50 states joined Weaver in denouncing inadequate school funding.

'Teachers are tired of elected officials 'acting' like they care about students when it's election time and then turning their backs on campaign promises later," Weaver said. "Broken promises hurt our kids."

Delegates responded, leaping to the aid of their counterparts in California, who are waging a pitched battle against the governor over precipitous budget cuts that threaten to slash school funding by a whopping $25,000 per classroom.

Schwarzenegger supports several ballot initiatives to be placed before voters in November that would further curtail school funding and undercut employee rights. But potential voters are being urged to reject the measures as part of an all-out blitz by the California Teachers Association (CTA). Delegates in Los Angeles, many of whom face budget cuts at home, made sure to leave their mark on Golden State politics. Among them, they wrote some 40,000 postcards to friends and colleagues in California, urging them to vote against the ballot initiatives.

Then they took to the streets. After the rally on the RA floor, about 600 delegates marched out of the Convention Center and down Wilshire Boulevard to Schwarzenegger's Los Angeles office to deliver resolutions opposing the governor's actions. Walking through the city streets as Angelenos idled in their cars, the demonstrators drew applause and supportive honks from onlookers-and this comment from a Los Angeles police officer: 'Our kids appreciate it!"

When the RA ended, delegates set to work bringing Weaver's six-point covenant to life in their communities. Weaver urged delegates to take these actions: transform students into citizens who will make a contribution; elect policy makers who will help fix and fund No Child Left Behind; stand with the nation's ESPs in their battles against privatization; and ensure that the lessons taught in the nation's classrooms are interesting and enriching. He also called on the nation to treat educators as the professionals they are and provide fair pay that reflects their professionalism, and to make sure there is a qualified teacher in every classroom.

"Insist upon the credibility of your colleagues," Weaver added. "Assist and support them, but urge their continued growth and commitment to our profession."

NEA members will be making even more noise in the year ahead. Weaver said that NEA gained more than 92,000 new members in the past three years, including 45,000 in the last year alone. "We are strong and getting stronger," he said.

For complete coverage of the Representative Assembly, go to www.nea.org/annuabneeting/raaction.>

Copyright National Education Association Sep 2005
Provided by ProQuest Information and Learning Company. All rights Reserved
 

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