In Kentucky
Hundreds of
Kentucky
teachers cheered Friday as Republican lawmakers decided not to vote on a
bill that would cut retirement benefits for one of the nation's
worst-funded public pension plans.
The GOP-led Senate was scheduled to vote on the pension bill Friday, but
lawmakers quickly called a recess to talk about the bill in private for
several hours. They finally emerged shortly after 1:30 p.m. to announce
they were sending the bill back to committee for possible changes.
"Individuals wanted more time to consider the position that we are in," Republican Senate President Robert Stivers said.
Outside, teachers cheered when they got the news before erupting into
chants of "we won't back down." The showdown comes at a time of growing
unrest among public educators across the country, led by thousands of
West Virginia teachers who walked off the job for nine days to secure a 5 percent pay raise from the state legislature.
Teachers in Arizona and Oklahoma are considering similar action. In
Kentucky, some teachers say they are willing to strike. But Stephanie
Winkler, president of the Kentucky Education Association, said striking
is illegal in Kentucky. She said the only way it could happen is if
superintendents agreed to close the schools, adding: "We hope it doesn't
have to come to that."
The wildcat strike in West Virgnina
was "illegal" or, technically, unlawful, too. But we may have reached a pivotal point in the degradation of labor where
that question no longer has any power.
Though it is illegal for public employees in West Virginia to strike,
they struck anyway. Highlighting the long tradition of taking illegal
action to win a righteous cause, many strikers here made homemade signs
saying, “Rosa Parks was not wrong.” The state initially threatened to
file injunctions to end the strike, but it was forced to back down. At
moments of mass struggle, in other words, legality becomes a question of
a relationship of forces. If a strike has the strength, the momentum,
and the support of the public at large, it is hard for the ruling elite
to crack down.
A willingness to flout the law will be particularly crucial over the
coming period. The constraints of the legal and institutional structure
of US labor relations have already set up the union movement to fail.
This will become even more the case if, as expected, the Supreme Court
eliminates crucial labor rights in the public sector.
But as the experience of West Virginia shows, it is possible to fight
and win even in the face of the most draconian legal obstacles.
Teacher evaluations and job security
are on the agenda in the Louisiana legislature this session. Lawmakers ought to know this may not be a good year to antagonize them.
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