Texas Public School Employees Rally for ‘Respect’ in Austin 

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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE 

March 14, 2023 

CONTACT: press@texasaft.org

Texas Public School Employees Rally for ‘Respect’ in Austin 

After more than 500 teachers and school staff members met with legislators, Texas AFT plans to release research on Wednesday that outlines the true cost of respect for public schools. 

Texas AFT members share their signs at a rally of public school employees outside the Texas AFL-CIO. Photo by Mariana Krueger, CCR Studios 

AUSTIN, Texas — “When I say ‘respect,’ you say ‘us,’” said Zeph Capo, president of the Texas American Federation of Teachers, from a stage outside of the Texas AFL-CIO on Monday. 

The crowd of several hundred Texas school employees responded enthusiastically in union, as they did when Capo made a second request: “When I say ‘reject,’ you say ‘vouchers.’”  

The call-and-response at the afternoon rally summed up the theme for Texas AFT’s Public Education Advocacy Day at the Texas Capitol: a resounding call for increased state funding for public schools — and public school employee raises — and against several bills that would endanger that funding through private school vouchers.  

In all, more than 500 Texas teachers and public school employees (including cafeteria workers, nurses, and counselors) participated in a day of events in and around the Capitol. Nearly 20 independent school districts were represented by members of Texas AFT’s local affiliates.  

Reps. John Bryant, Donna Howard, and Gina Hinojosa speak to Texas AFT members in a Monday morning session. 
Photo by Mariana Krueger, CCR Studios 

School Employees Visit Legislators 

Before the Texas House reconvened Monday afternoon, teachers and school employees blanketed the Capitol, visiting the offices of their representatives and senators. Texas AFT members took the opportunity to share their personal experiences with legislators, while also asking where their elected representatives stood on several key bills, including:  

  • House Bills 31 and 135 by Rep. Gina Hinojosa (D-Austin) and Rep. Diego Bernal (D-San Antonio), which would increase money for public schools by switching to enrollment-based funding 
  • House Bill 882 by Rep. Donna Howard (D-Austin), which would tie increases to the state basic allotment for schools to the Consumer Price Index 
  • House Bill 1548 by Rep. James Talarico (D-Round Rock), which would provide teachers and certified school staff with a $15,000 raise and support staff with a 25% raise 
  • House Bill 301 by Rep. Glenn Rogers (R-Graford), which would provide retired educators with a 6% cost-of-living increase to their pensions 
Sen. Morgan LaMantia, Rep. Venton Jones, and Rep. James Talarico testify about bills they’ve filed to Texas AFT members at a People’s Hearing at the Agricultural Museum in the Texas Capitol. Photo by Win O’Neal, CCR Studios

‘People’s Hearing’ Puts Educators in Decision-Making Seats 

In the afternoon, Texas AFT hosted a “People’s Hearing” in the Texas Capitol’s Agricultural Museum. A small committee of current and retired teachers and school staff members shared their stories and heard invited testimony from several legislators and policy experts.  

“I am here today to bring light to the fact that as a full-time employee, a manager for six years in the district, last year, my gross income was $20,132.17 to support my two children,” said Pearl West, a child nutrition manager at Northside AFT, in remarks to attendees. “I feed several hundred hungry students a day, and I struggle to feed my own two.” 

Reps. James Talarico, Alma Allen, and Venton Jones, as well as Sen. Morgan LaMantia, outlined bills they have or will file that address needs identified by Texas school employees for substantial raises, increased staffing investments, and quality-of-life improvements.  

You can watch a recording of the hearing on Texas AFT’s Facebook page.  

Texas AFT President Zeph Capo, flanked by presidents of AFT local unions in Texas, speaks to educators at a rally outside the Texas AFL-CIO. Photo by Mariana Krueger, CCR Studios

Rally for Public Education Unites Educators, Parents, & Students

To end the day, participants made their way down the street to the Texas AFL-CIO. There, they heard from not only public school stakeholders like teachers, parents, and students, but also from a variety of allies.  

Speakers at the event included Lynn Davenport, a strong opponent of both privatization and data harvesting in education technology; Dr. Michael Bell, senior pastor at Fort Worth’s Greater St. Stephen First Church-Baptist; and Carol Burris, executive director of the Network for Public Education Foundation.  

The resounding message: how can the state of Texas be looking at implementing school voucher programs that have cost other states billions of dollars when it sits at 39th in the nation already for public-school funding?  

“If we were fully funded, we would not be losing teachers left and right,” said Capo, pushing back on Gov. Greg Abbott’s assertion that he has “fully funded” public education. “If we provided the supports necessary, we wouldn’t lost 50% of our new teachers every year.”  

Text says "Fully Funded and Fully Respected: The Path to Thriving Texas Public Schools"

Research Release Scheduled for Wednesday, March 15

Last year, Texas AFT partnered with nonprofit policy organization Every Texan on The Lost Decade, a report that outlined the dire funding landscape for Texas public education. Notably, that report highlighted that Texas teacher salaries had gone down, on average, over the past decade and that many support staff were working for poverty-level wages.  

Building on that research base, Texas AFT and Every Texan have partnered once again. On Wednesday, the organizations will release Fully Funded, Fully Respected: The Plan for Texas Public Schools.  

This second report presents an answer to the question, “What do fully funded public schools look like?” by presenting potential costs and budget savings for teacher and staff raises, increased staffing, investments in student services, and other components of Texas AFT’s Respect Agenda.  

Reporters are invited to join both organizations for a Zoom press conference at 11 a.m. Wednesday, March 15. Register here.  

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The Texas American Federation of Teachers represents 66,000 teachers, paraprofessionals, support personnel, and higher-education employees across the state. Texas AFT is affiliated with the 1.7-million-member American Federation of Teachers and the AFL-CIO.