John Thompson, teacher and historian, explains in “The Progressive” why teachers in Oklahoma are primed for a mass walkout. To be sure, they were inspired by the strike in West Virginia. But they have grievances as compelling as those in West Virginia. Budget cuts. Tax breaks to the oil and gas industry. Low salaries. The Oklahoma Legislature doesn’t care about educating the children of the state.
“Oklahoma ranks in the top five states for oil and natural gas production, and gives $500 million a year in tax breaks to energy companies. But the state also leads the nation in cutting state funding for education, reducing formula funding by 28 percent since 2008.
“While the state has cut taxes on oil, state employees have not received an across-the-board pay raise in twelve years. The state is among the last in the nation in teacher pay. The starting salary for a new teacher is $31,600, and the poor pay and lack of resources has resulted in an acute shortage of teachers across the state.
“But because it will take a 75 percent legislative majority to raise taxes, however, the Oklahoma politics are especially complicated. And that is why stakeholders are united in using the term “walkout” instead of “strike.”
“Corresponding by email, vice president of the Tulsa Classroom Teachers Association Shawna Mott-Wright asks, “Can you imagine being a senior in high school? These poor kids have had their education cut, cut, and cut since they were 8 years old. Our children cannot wait any longer.”
“The likely walkout grows out of a larger problem. Oklahoma Republicans have sought to shrink government so that it can be drowned in a bathtub. Oklahoma’s children have come of age as the state cut health services; killed the Earned Income Tax Credit for the poorest families; slashed funding for mental health; and undermined other social services (all this as it became first in the nation in incarcerating women). The state is tied with Montana and West Virginia for first in children surviving multiple Adverse Childhood Experiences.”
Critics will take aim at teachers for wanting a living wage. But how can they defend the deliberate underfunding of the state’s schools? That hurts children.

Reblogged this on David R. Taylor-Thoughts on Education and commented:
I predict that this will continue across the country and you will see more states following suit.
If little dan gets reelected then you may see Texas as one of the states that has a “walk-out”.
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Wish ALL teachers would have a protest on the same day across this nation and fill the streets everywhere. I honestly believe most people would support our public school teachers and be joined by others.
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“same day”???
You mean “same days”, eh!
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From the NY Times: “Across [Oklahoma], teachers say they make ends meet by selling their blood plasma, or by working second jobs as luggage handlers, Uber drivers or in lawn maintenance.” What an utter disgrace. These far right GOP libertarian extremists just hate public schools, public anything, they are determined to destroy the commons because everyone should pull themselves up by their own boot straps, just like Bill Gates or Jeff Bezos.
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Oh, I hope they do, although easy for me to say. If they do I hope they don’t get fired.
I’m grateful for teachers acting as advocates for public schools in the complete absence of the people we elected and pay to do this work. It’s double duty and they shouldn’t have to do it but since no one else is interested I guess it falls to them.
Oklahoma actually cut instructional time to save money on public schools- clearly not a high priority. Some of the schools have 4 day weeks. I used to joke that every public school in the country could close and none of our “leaders” would even notice, and that is now coming to pass! All these “passionate advocates for children” and the whole West Virginia system shut down and it didn’t make a ripple in ed reform. They were busy pushing vouchers.
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If Oklahoma fires every teacher who walks out, they may as well close their schools. Maybe TFA has enough scabs to rush in.
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The time is now for a national teacher strike/walk out (what ever one wants to call it!). Right at testing season since no learning is going on in classrooms anyway. I think a few weeks of ALL teachers taking a stand will wake everyone up to take notice. The abuse/dereliction of children needs to stop.
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Issue-focused national leadership needed: few understand what the WV teachers were fighting, and that their demands were larger than salary and health care.
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Teachers in OK stand strong!
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There’s more than a livable wage at stake In Oklahoma because of the oil and gas industry that allegedly owns the state’s government.
“Oklahoma’s Rise In Quakes Linked to Man-Made Causes”
“Bill Whitaker reports on the high incidence of earthquakes in Oklahoma, where oil and gas production is injecting vast amounts of wastewater into the earth.”
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/60-minutes-oklahoma-rise-in-quakes-linked-to-man-made-causes/
For decades, Oklahoma had few earthquakes and then starting after 2012, the number of quakes skyrocketed from close to ZERO to almost 1,000 annually
https://www.marketwatch.com/story/oil-has-made-this-state-the-man-made-earthquake-capital-of-the-world-2016-03-15
Those teachers should also demand renovations to school buildings to increase protection from earthquake damage.
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Oklahoma is a prime example of what happens when conservative Republicans implement their supply-side tax cut nonsense. Real people suffer.
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Everyone and everything suffers except the billionaires that profit the most and most of them live out of state or live in areas that aren’t touched by the damage they are causing due to their greed and hunger to exert their paid for power over others.
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I find it interesting that two states (Kansas and Oklahoma) in the heartland of American are/have been the sites of two great tax cut experiments that have failed miserably.
Kansas tax cuts almost bankrupted them and now a report says that it will take $2Billion over the next 5 years to fix education funding.
Oklahoma has starved public education to the point teachers are ready to walk out and probably will on April 2nd.
At least Nebraska is holding it place by keeping charter schools out of its state.
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So far. The rightwing in Nebraska is pushing hard for charters and vouchers.
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Besides Omaha/Lincoln Metro areas, most of Nebraska is “rural” or not very big and really hard to justify charter schools.
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Agreed.
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Out of curiosity, I’ve been thinking about this for some time, I googled “states with the highest ratio of charter schools” and discovered that although California has the most Charter schools at 1,234, according to Ballotpedia (based on 2015-16), it does not have the highest ratio. In fact, the total enrollment for charter schools in California is 9.18-percent of the total number of children attending k-12 schools.
There were eight (counting DC) with higher ratios.
DC had the highest ratio at almost 50-percent.
Colorado had more than 12-percent.
Florida more than 10-percent.
Delaware more than 11-percent.
Louisana more than 11-percent.
Utah more than 10-percent.
Arizona almost 16-percent.
Michigan was 9.85-percent.
https://ballotpedia.org/Charter_school_statistics_for_all_50_states
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Florida – Thanks Jeb Bush
Louisiana – Thanks Bobby Jindal, Katrina and the “Miracle of New Orleans”
I’m curious who the leaders were in the other states that lead the charter movements.
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