On April 2, an estimated 30,000
Oklahoma teachers walked out of schools across the state, some
traveling hundreds of miles to the capital to protest. This momentum
has not stopped: At the time of this writing, teachers are
marching—by foot—from Tulsa
to Oklahoma City. Across the state, they are planning to continue
to mobilize, despite legislative opposition that has gone so far
as to accuse the
teachers of bussing in protestors from Chicago.
To explain the reasons for the
strike and ongoing mobilizations, most mainstream media have been
marketing poverty porn: This teacher
sells plasma. Another works six
jobs to make ends meet. Some teachers in Oklahoma tell In
These Times that
major outlets are specifically only asking to speak with the poorest
teachers.
But there’s a bigger issue at
hand than the impoverished state of teachers and their support staff:
privatization. For more than a decade, state legislators—Democrats
and Republicans alike—have marched the state off the proverbial
financial cliff, then used budget shortfalls to push privatization.
For every notch the state’s economic belt is tightened, a private
company comes in and takes over—at a cost largely unknown to
Oklahomans. Take, for example, the Oklahoma Department of Human
Services (ODHS), which shifted the sheltering of some abused and
neglected children to the private entity White Fields in 2006.
Private institutions aren’t subject to the same level of open
records requirements and accountability standards as state
agencies are in Oklahoma, worries Connie Johnson.
This trend, alongside shrinking
unions, is a factor behind Monday’s walkout, as well as protests
continuing through the week and planned into the coming months.
Oklahoma should be a rich state.
Oil derricks suck the Earth’s blood like mechanical mosquitos, from
small-town backyards to the front and back lawn of the state capitol
building in Oklahoma City. The state has a rich and long history of
coal mining. Yet the oil, gas and coal industries have finagled
low-to-no-tax schemes. Meanwhile, the poor pay a
greater percentage of their incomes on state and local taxes than
wealthier residents, and face sin taxes on cigarettes and alcohol.
Amid this climate, the Oklahoma
legislature did pass an 11th hour bill on March 28 to fund teachers’
salaries with a raise that many consider insufficient. The question
of how the state would fund the raise was left out, even though there
was much self-congratulatory back-slapping among elected officials.
“I hope [the teachers] can come up here and say 'thank you' on
Monday and go back to the classrooms,” announced Oklahoma
Gov. Mary Fallin (R).
But many Oklahomans were disgusted
by the bill and the governor’s statement. State Rep. Karen Gaddis
(D-Tulsa/Broken Arrow) wrote on her
Facebook page:
… it was nothing more than a
bait-and-switch… THE BILL IS ALMOST $150M UNDERFUNDED! … the
Legislature must either come up with new sources of revenue (…
usually on the back of the common man) or cut the budget in other
areas, like mental health services, drug and alcohol rehab services,
higher ed, infrastructure, corrections, whatever.
State Rep. Roger Ford (R-Oklahoma
City) agreed on his
Facebook page: “I'm being told raises will be paid from ‘other’
revenue sources next fiscal year. So once again districts have to
trust the legislature to fund education or the district will have
another unfunded mandate on their back.”
Yet, some mainstream media outlets,
including USA Today,
painted the story of the teachers walking out after the bill was
signed by the governor as if the teachers
were ingrates.
Teachers express frustration with
the legislature’s incompetence in passing an unfunded bill.
“Every
piece of legislation that comes, out it’s like, what now?” Julie
Edenborough, 51, tells In
These Times. She’s
the director of Title III and Migrant Services for Guymon Public
Schools—a tiny district in the Oklahoma panhandle, just north of
the Texas border and hours away from the nearest shopping mall. She
works with the migrant children of the farmworker community. She says
in the last two years, the state has taken back money they had
already budgeted to the district, three times.
Edenborough says it’s not just
those cuts that hurt. It’s the cuts to the Department of Mental
Health and Substance Abuse Services, which was directed to shed
nearly 25 percent of its budget last Fall. “The Texas
County Health Department is on the brink of closing,” she
adds.
“I need [those] core service[s] to be operational so the
student is healthy and can learn. We have two caseworkers working a
six-county area. They are over worked. They can’t take students
in.” Children, she says, are being sent home into harm’s way for
lack of state support.
“We’re hoping those other
employees in those agencies will fight with us as well,” she says.
“Every agency of the state is at a critical mass of breakage.”
Other state agencies,
from Corrections to Mental Health to Transportation, are
now complaining about
their severely cut budgets, too.
The way Oklahoma funds public
services has to be revisited, says Larry Cagle, a teacher and
leader of the mobilization group Oklahoma
Teachers United. “Those state workers have gone without a raise
as much as we have.”
In addition, many school
superintendents of public school systems and principals have been
complicit, offering little to no support of the teachers, says Cagle.
“They are working aggressively to force in a privatization of the
schools,” he says. “That’s the real story.”
Cagle points to the Eli
and Edythe Broad Foundation, an organization that seeks to
run schools as private entities under the banner of “entrepreneurship
for the public good.” He says this group is a key force pushing
resources out of Oklahoma’s public schools and into private
entities like charter schools.
Cagle says public school
superintendents, principals and school board members across the state
were trained by or are otherwise a part of Broad’s system. Tulsa
Public Schools superintendent Deborah Gist, for example,
is Broad
trained, and designated a “Champion
for Charters” by the National Alliance for Public Charter
Schools when she was commissioner of Rhode Island’s public
schools.
Cindy Decker is an elected
school board
member for Tulsa Public Schools and is also director of
research and innovation at CAP Tulsa—a $65
million organization that is also opening early
education centers in Tulsa public schools.
“Why is Cindy Decker allowed to
be a school board member when [her organization] has contractual
agreements with [public schools]—but a school administrator isn’t
allowed to sit because of conflict
of interest? Why do we allow private industry to have
positions on the school board?” Cagle asks.
The strategy, he says, makes it
easy for private education to move into poor minority communities,
and then squeeze white districts until they succumb to privatization.
KIPP, one of the charter school business lacerated
by John Oliveron Last
Week Tonightin 2016, has already taken over a
large Tulsa minority high school.
But privatization of state services
isn’t working: Last week, White Fields announced it was terminating
its ODHS contract because it isn’t “set
up to help the type of child we are being sent [mentally ill],”
creating a new crisis in what to do with kids who need a place to go
and a state completely unready to house them. But it’s hard to
tally just how much money the state is spending on such
privatization.
Support for the teachers and state
workers resonates across the state. “My mom is a retired
teacher,” says Chris Isbell, a pharmacist and owner of Johnny’s
Hometown Pharmacy in Roland. “I very much support the teachers.”
Others think it’s time to vote
new folks in. “I sympathize with the teachers,” says Tim
Tanksley, of Bokoshe. “But sometimes I wonder how many of them,
their families, what their party affiliations are, who they vote for,
who they put in office. Sometimes I think a lot of them, they keep
handing them back the stick and saying ‘hit me again. I haven’t
suffered enough.’”
Cagle says the legislature is known
to retaliate against teachers when they step out of line. For
example, despite bipartisan agreement that the bill the governor
signed on the 28this unfunded, the Tulsa
World reported that
State Rep. Kevin McDugle, (R-Broken Arrow) said, "I'm not voting
for another stinking measure when [the teachers are] acting the way
they're acting."
Despite the potential for
retaliation, the teachers are more angry than afraid: Cagle says
teachers from across the state are participating in ongoing,
state-wide, marches and rolling walkouts. And despite popular
stereotypes of Oklahomans as white and Republican, Oklahoma’s
demographics have changed dramatically in 20 years. A
third of the population is minority or mixed race. And
in Guymon, dozens of languages are spoken in a student population of
just 3,000.
Motivated, inspired, and hopeful
for change from the bottom up, Edenborough says that 60 teachers from
Guymon made the roughly five-hour drive to Oklahoma City to protest,
leaving Easter Sunday afternoon. The other teachers are protesting
locally in shifts, while still making sure the students are picked up
by buses and are brought to school so they can eat breakfast and
lunch. Edenborough says 85 percent of Guymon’s students receive
free meals.
“You don’t grow stronger by
starving people,” says Edenborough.
Possible solutions continue
to fall short, and while the OEA
issued demands to end the walkout, Oklahoma Teachers
United is publicly not willing to end the ongoing work actions and
protests before funding is secured for teachers and fellow
public school and state employees.
Oklahoma, says Cagle, is “not a
poor state. It’s a priority state,” meaning where the money goes
demonstrates the priorities of the state. Clearly, he says, “the
money in the state is going somewhere.” And the answer to where
it’s going, he says, is in “the hands of the one percent.”
“They’re pumping it from our
home,” he says. “It’s our oil. Our water. Our land. And people
are waking up.”
>> The article above was written by Valerie Panne, and is reprinted from In These Times.
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