Hundreds of teachers mobbed the State Capitol, demanding better school funding and salaries.
DENVER — Hundreds of public school teachers swarmed the Colorado state Capitol on Monday, shuttering one suburban Denver school district to demand better salaries, as lawmakers were set to debate a pension reform measure that would cut retirement benefits and take-home pay.
With the demonstrations, Colorado educators join peers in West Virginia, Oklahoma, Kentucky and Arizona who have staged strikes or high-profile protests in recent weeks to draw attention to what teachers unions see as a growing crisis in the profession.
In Colorado the need is especially stark – and apparently at odds with a state economy that ranks among the nation’s best. The average teacher salary – $46,155 in 2016 -ranks 46th among states and Washington, D.C., according to the latest figures from the National Education Association.
By another metric, Colorado’s dead last. The Education Law Center, an advocacy group, said this year that Colorado’s teacher salaries are the worst in the nation “when compared to professionals with similar education levels.”
Teachers rallied in and outside the building Monday, holding signs and chanting slogans including “You left me no choice. I have to use my teacher voice.” They drew honks from passing cars before heading inside, where their cheers and songs resonated throughout the Golden Dome, drawing lawmakers out of their respective chambers to investigate the noise.

Taxes in Colorado are complicated, but part of the reason schools (and so many other things) are underfunded is because of the TABOR amendment to the state constitution. Taxing entities must refund monies to taxpayers if the amount collected exceeds the amount received the year before by a certain percentage. So if the number of students in your school district, and the number of property owners, increase by 15% in a given year, the district can’t keep the 15% but must return some of it to taxpayers. Sounds good in theory but it’s wreaked havoc on budgets statewide as they get ratcheted down every year although the population increases. This one of many reasons Colorado students are getting shortchanged.
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It actually doesn’t sound good even in theory. If you’ve got population growth, you’re acquiring more taxpayers/ revenue, aren’t you? Or am I missing something? If the idea is to cap tax increase to a certain %, which is OK, seems that could be done proportionally, accounting for changes in the revenue base.
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Here is from the research which I read from thread “How Low Will Trump’s Courtiers Go?”
By dianeravitch
April 14, 2018 // 53…(comments)
and from contributor “carolmalaysia April 15, 2018 at 3:08 pm”
[start paragraph]
A Pulitzer winner takes an even deeper look at evictions and finds an ongoing crisis for poor Americans
Matthew Desmond has teamed up with Princeton researchers and students to build up the nation’s first database of people kicked out of their homes in the United States. They found 83 million records — 2.3 million every year, as wages have stagnated and housing costs have soared. It’s an economic trauma that leaves a permanent mark on your record.
The typical eviction case: A family paying 60 percent to 80 percent of its income for a place to live, with no government assistance.
https://www.npr.org/player/embed/601783346/601892980
[end paragraph]
In conclusion, all strikes should demand that salary can cover the residential rental costs about 30% or less of the salary either weekly, monthly and annually all the time = cost of living increases, then salary that can covers “living rental cost” proportionally increases.
Educators do not demand the NUMBER, but the percentage of the whole salary (30% or less) can cover the cost of living. This will teach parents (= working class) to be aware of the cost of their freedom way ahead being into “an economic trauma”. As well, this typical demand can wake up those gullible and corrupted politicians being realistic with life. Back2basic
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It is unfortunate that students are missing schools due to these protests but it is a necessary evil. Teachers need to be correctly compensated for the work that they do. With the increase of cost of living there needs to be an increase in pay. Teachers do amazing work and should not be struggling to live because of it.
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I am attempting to visit a local public school, and watch one(1) class for one(1) hour. I am getting the “stonewall” from everyone. Most schools will not answer my emails, and none will return a phone call.
Here is what I got yesterday:
Thank you for your interest in Whitman MS. I am directing Mr. Johnson, one of our assistant principals, to reach out to you and answer any questions you may have. Unfortunately, as we gear up for end of year tests, I cannot accommodate any of your other requests. (like visiting the school and observing) If you are wishing to volunteer for FCPS, I encourage you to reach out to central office at Gatehouse Administration Center. You can find more information at FCPS.edu. There is a process you would need to go through.
Best,
Craig Herring, Principal
Walt Whitman Middle School
Public schools are public enterprises, paid for by the public, and they exist to serve the public. The public is BARRED from entering them.
Now you may be beginning to see why I support school choice/vouchers .
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Charles,
You could be a terrorist or a child molester, and the school is politely asking you to go through a screening process.
Try visiting a charter school.
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I hold a security clearance, and I work at the Pentagon. I have no objection to being screened. There are eight(8) charter schools currently operating in Virginia, I will contact the nearest one.
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That’s what all the terrorists say.
The educators are busy educating. Maybe they don’t have a staff person free to give tours.
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Boy it pains me to have to agree with Charles, but in this case I do. Members of the public should be able to access public schools (note the word “public” in there) without getting fingerprinted, etc. The chances that an interested observer is either a terrorist or a child molester are so ridiculously slim as to be practically non-existent, and in either case, basic security measures (no one is allowed to be alone with a student, for instance) should keep the kids safe.
When my younger daughter wanted to go to public school, there were two possible choices where she could attend because a new school had just been built and the exact boundary lines were not yet set in stone. I wanted her to be able to experience both schools, so I contacted the principals of each. One school welcomed us with open arms, allowed us to spend time in a class and gave us a tour of the building during school hours. The other told me that it would be too “disruptive” to allow a potential student to visit during the school day and that she could only visit after school hours. We’re both pretty familiar with what a school building looks like, so I don’t see the point of visiting an empty building. Not allowing us to visit during school hours left me wondering what the second school was trying to hide. We ended up at the first.
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I have contacted a charter school in Loudoun County VA . The principal is delighted to have me speak to a class, and he wants me to deliver a talk to an after-school girls engineering/STEM club. The school does not permit visitation to any classes.
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Charles,
I am not posting your link to the Heritage Foundation’s claim that the US wasted trillions of dollars trying to reduce poverty and failed. Are we a totally stupid nation? Why do we have the highest poverty rates of any advanced nation? Shall we let the billionaires keep their billions and let the poor starve? Find something positive, not just blustering rightwing propaganda.
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Q Are we a totally stupid nation? END Q
Sometimes, government policies are very stupid. With the best of intentions, LBJ started a “war on poverty”. The result is a destroyed African-American family, blighted inner cities, trillions of dollars wasted, fatherless boys running with gangs, fatherless girls with no guidance and nothing to look forward to but a life on welfare and food stamps. Stupid? Hell, yes!
The war on drugs, has resulted in drugs all over the nation, we cannot keep drugs out of prisons and schools. Six blocks from the Capitol dome, in Northwest WashDC, there is a open-air drug bazaar. Cocaine and crack are available on street corners all over this town. Politicians are bribed. Nations are in violent chaos, Ex: Colombia, as a result of the failed war on drugs. Stupid? Hell yes
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Charles,
So it is your view that we should spend nothing to reduce poverty. You say it’s a waste of money to help people in need, to create jobs to lift them out of poverty. Do you have any positive suggestions for people who are destitute? Here is a question for you: What would Jesus do?
Here is another: why are we unable to reduce poverty when every other advanced nation has done it?
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I am NOT saying that the people (through their government) should do nothing to alleviate poverty. I am saying that 50 years and $22 Trillion dollars after the declaration of the “war on poverty”, that poverty has won. Our nation has more people in poverty now, than when the “war” started. If that is not failure, what is?
The welfare system (SNAP, housing assistance, AFDC,etc) robs the recipients of human dignity. Welfare encourages female recipients to eschew marriage, and rewards them for having children out of wedlock. Welfare is a disincentive to marriage and stable families.
It is a cliche, but still true: Give a man a fish, you feed him for today, Teach a man to fish, and you feed him for his whole life. Job training programs are an effective tool to give people the dignity of work. It is cost-effective and family-friendly. I support increasing job training programs, to give people the skills to hold the jobs of the 21st century.
I would like to see a reduction in AFDC, and expansion of the Job Corps, to include unmarried females with dependent children. We could turn abandoned military bases into job-training centers, and house the families with children in group homes. Food service and medical care can be provided. Retired NCOs could serve as security and surrogate fathers. How can minority male children succeed, if the only successful males they ever see are pimps and dope dealers?
People in the job corps centers can be taught employment skills and trades like welding and computer skills. Light industry, like toy-making could locate operations on the bases. Graduates of the training programs could be given job placement assistance.
Jesus talked a great deal about money. He never advocated taking money from working people, and subsidizing illegitimacy. He said “The poor you will have with you always”, and “Go and sin no more”.
Our nation has been unable to reduce poverty over the past 50 years, due to bizarre and ineffective government policies. It seems like the more we spend, the worse poverty gets. A huge reason that we are unable to reduce poverty lies in our ridiculous immigration policies. Here is a story from the Los Angeles Times (a liberal paper). see
http://www.latimes.com/opinion/op-ed/la-oe-hymowitz-child-poverty-immigration-20171029-story.html
Every other wealthy nation has not eradicated poverty. See
https://www.weforum.org/agenda/2017/06/these-rich-countries-have-high-levels-of-child-poverty/
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Charles,
There you go again, making stupid rightwing comments that waste my time because I have to correct you.
The US has the highest rate of child poverty of any advanced nation in the world and the article you posted proves it. The UK is close behind us because it followed the Reagan-Thatcher policies of throwing poor people under the bus. The only countries with higher poverty rates in the article you posted are Lithuania, Romania, Turkey, Bulgaria, Mexico. Are they advanced countries? No. Why are we so far behind the other advanced countries?
Do you want to live in a country where children die of malnutrition and adults die in the streets? I would say you do.
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Q Why are we so far behind the other advanced countries? END Q
I would say it is because of a combination of factors. Failed government policies must head the list. Even you admit that other advanced nations have a lower poverty rate than ours. I agree! Other nations have made the investments, and implemented policies that have had great effect in reducing poverty. Perhaps our nation can take a lesson from some of them, and abandon our failed policies, which have resulted in $22 Trillion dollars spent with such little to show for it.
“If you need a demonstration of eternal life, just look at a federal government program” – Unknown.
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Actually, Charles, that quote comes from me, in an article I wrote for The American Scholar about what I learned when working for the government.
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DFERs are SO WRONG.
https://www.chalkbeat.org/posts/co/2018/04/14/colorado-democrats-overwhelming-reject-democrats-for-education-reform-at-state-assembly/
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Why Colorado Public School Teachers MARCHED! I support them.
https://www.chalkbeat.org/posts/co/2018/04/16/why-colorado-teachers-marched-on-the-state-capitol/
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Here’s GW, Jr. defending his horrid education policies: https://marketbrief.edweek.org/marketplace-k-12/george-w-bush-defends-legacy-no-child-left-behind-education-business-conference/
Most politicians have NO CLUE. They USE/USED public school teachers for their own profits in all ways. SAD and BAD people …. is all I can say.
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