Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

W.Va. teachers strike continues

State Senate votes no on 5 percent pay raise

- By Michael Virtanen

Unions representi­ng West Virginia teachers and service personnel say they will stay out on strike after the state Senate voted to cut the 5 percent pay raise they had negotiated with Gov. Jim Justice.

In a statement Saturday, the American Federation of Teachers-West Virginia, West Virginia Education Associatio­n and the School Service Personnel Associatio­n said Senate President Mitch Carmichael and his leadership team had left them with no choice after they voted to reduce the raise to 4 percent.

The statement said all public schools in West Virginia would be closed again Monday “and remain closed until the Senate honors the agreement that was made.”

The Republican-controlled Senate voted Saturday evening to approve the lower pay raise, bucking teachers, Republican Gov. Jim Justice and the Republican-controlled House, which approved the 5 percent raise on Wednesday. The two bills will now have to be reconciled. It was unclear how soon that process would begin.

The Senate’s vote came as the teachers’ strike rolled into its second weekend. Republican Sen. Greg Boso of Nicholas introduced the amendment to lower the raise, which the full Senate adopted by a vote of 19-15.

Senate Republican­s have repeatedly emphasized exercising restraint with state spending, while agreeing that teachers and West Virginia’s other public workers are all underpaid. “That compensati­on increase is long overdue,” said Sen. Charles Trump, a Berkeley Springs Republican. “We’ve been able to do this without tax increases.”

Approving a 4 percent raise, instead of the 5 percent hike, will save the state $17 million, Boso said.

Democratic lawmakers said their Republican counterpar­ts should approve the deal the governor negotiated with union leaders for a 5 percent raise.

“We’re all caught up in our egos,” said Democratic Sen. Douglas Facemire of Sutton. He noted the impact of the impasse on students, including those who depend on schools for their meals. “For 1 percent we’re going to let kids go hungry,” he said.

Hundreds of teachers and supporters, including students, rallied at the Capitol on Friday, the seventh day they’ve shuttered classrooms.

Teachers are protesting pay that’s among the lowest in the nation, rising health care costs and a previously approved 2 percent raise for next year after four years without any increase.

Justice told school superinten­dents gathered at the Capitol on Friday that he believed the votes for the raise were there. One administra­tor noted the impasse is affecting 277,000 students and 35,000 employees.

Protesting teachers have argued that education in West Virginia — where more than 700 classrooms lack fully certified full-time teachers — needs to be a higher priority among politician­s. Pay starts at about $33,000 a year, lower than in surroundin­g states.

 ?? John Raby The Associated Press ?? Parry Casto, a fifth-grade teacher at the Explorer Academy in Huntington, W.Va., dressed in an Uncle Sam costume, leads hundreds of teachers in chants Thursday outside the state Senate chambers at the Capitol in Charleston, W.Va.
John Raby The Associated Press Parry Casto, a fifth-grade teacher at the Explorer Academy in Huntington, W.Va., dressed in an Uncle Sam costume, leads hundreds of teachers in chants Thursday outside the state Senate chambers at the Capitol in Charleston, W.Va.

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