While Oklahoma teachers and school employees gear up for a possible statewide strike starting April 2, a teacher uprising is also brewing in Arizona. Teacher pay in Arizona ranks last in the country by some measures. Educators there, inspired by their counterparts in West Virginia, are rapidly organizing to change that. Within the last 10 days, 30,000 Arizona teachers have flooded into their own Facebook group, Arizona Educators United, and begun a series of highly visible actions, sporting their āRed for Edā T-shirts wherever they go. Labor Notes interviewed Phoenix, Arizona, seventh-grade math and science teacher Rebecca Garelli, a leader in the group.
This all got started two Fridays ago, March 2. I had become friends with Jay OāNeal from West Virginia, who helped start the teachers and public employees Facebook group there, and he let me into their group. Iād been hanging out, just watching things, thinking, āWhy is nobody in Arizona doing this?ā So my Chicago blood got boiling, and I said, āIām just going to spark the fire, Iāll be the catalyst.ā
I had been communicating with some folks on the Arizona BATS pageāBad Ass Teachers. I had been posting some things coming out of West Virginia, and others would get fired up too, so we started a dialogue. And then one of the admins of that page said, āAnybody else think Arizona should do something like that?ā I said, āYess!!!ā
I and another teacher started a Facebook group that day: Arizona Teachers United. There was no mention of striking, no mention of action. OvernightāI woke up and we had 1,500 members. It was a secret groupāone person invited another, invited another.
I have three kids, I was at the park all weekend, and I didnāt see any of this going on. There were hundreds of comments. The page blew up. I panicked a bit. We had lawyers on there from the Goldwater Institute [a right-wing think tank/lawyersā organization], and a couple of people who made me nervous. I said, āI think we need to pull the plug and do this more privately.ā And when I posted that everybody said, āNo!!! We have momentum, donāt let the momentum die!ā
Derek [Harris, a Tucson middle school teacher active in the group] said: āWait. Donāt shut it down. We have a vision for this.ā Dylan [Wegela, another Phoenix middle school teacher] said: āDonāt do this! Everybody needs this!ā
By the time I had gotten to all this, Derek had started a new group: Arizona Educators United. Thatās how we all met. I asked to be an admin. Other people stepped up. We ended up with a little group of nine people administering the group. We had never met each other in person. Now we are constantly collaborating.
RED FOR ED
Our first big event was āRed for Edā on Wednesday, March 7, when we asked teachers throughout the state to wear red T-shirts to school. The idea of Red for Ed day, thatās from Noah Karvelis, another teacher. We needed a way to connect with our communities and show them the reality of what weāre living.
We put Red for Ed day on Twitter. We had an event set up on Facebook. I put it on my personal page because Iām friends with everybody I work with. We spread the word on social media. People got itāpeople showed up in their red shirts. They were taking pictures, showing: āhereās my school,ā āhereās my school.ā That got people really fired up. And that got people motivated to join the next actionāāWhy Iām Red for Edāāon Friday of that same week.
We said, āEverybodyās got a story. Letās make those stories public.ā We asked people to make signs with three reasons why theyāre joining our movement, and to take pictures and post them on social media.
The mediaās finding us through all thisāweāve gotten coverage in major papers and TV stations throughout the state. Weāre not even the ones directing it. The mediaās looking for us.
PICKETING THE GOVERNOR
We want to have events occurring as frequently as possible. We want to close the gap and keep the momentum building. We have to keep people engaged and involved. So we came up with the idea to go down to the radio station on Monday.
The governor goes on the radio every Monday at 5:15. I put signs up on my house over the weekend. I put signs and decals on my car. I showed everybody what my poster was going to look like. We marketed through the live video: āWeāre going to have some signs, weāre going to keep it peaceful, professional.ā People want to know whatās the expectation. This is why using Facebookās āliveā video is crucial to our movement. We can give people direction, so they know what to expect.
At the radio station in north Phoenix, we had hundreds of teachers. Some people brought their kids. We had all kinds of supporters. The majority sounded like teachers. Some ESPs [education support professionals] and other support personnel. The media came downāwe had a helicopter from Fox News! Everybody was really nice and kind and respectful and it went really well.
I was on the megaphone, since Iāve been through this beforeāI had some chants in my back pocket from Chicago. It was wonderful. People started making up things on their own. I found some more people for my action team. Then we took a group photo at the end, and put that up on Facebook to say, āWhatās next?ā
We just had a Red for Ed rally at the Capitol on Wednesday morning, during our spring break. We were there to oppose SB 1467, a bill that would take funds away from public education and give it to private schools through school tuition organizations (STOs), which provide scholarships to attend private schools.
But weāre also asking people, take a picture with your Red for Ed shirt on. Whether youāre at a restaurant, or youāre out hiking, snap a photo, so that we can all be together even though weāre on spring break.
Thatāll be continual: Red for Ed every Wednesday from here on out.
LESSONS FROM ALL OVER
Before I got to Arizona, I was a Chicago public school teacher for 11 years. I was a part of the Chicago Teachers Unionājust a member, but I was totally active in everything we did. It gave me a few pointers.
When we were starting to organize, I called upon my previous experience with the CTU to mention the idea of having site liaisons at all the school sites. In Chicago we had not only our union representative at the school, but we also created an additional person in case that person was unavailable. I mentioned that to the group and they said thatās a great idea. So we started our site liaisons based on that model, to build an in-person network in the schools. In our case, some of the site liaisons are union reps.
AEA [Arizona Education Association] has been supportive the entire way: āLook at you guysāthis is amazing.ā Our relationship is parallel. We are building this grassroots movement, Arizona Educators United. We are a teacher-driven, educator-led organization. But we have the support of AEA. And we can communicate with them if necessary on ideas, timelines, laws and regulations, that kind of thing. But they want us to run the showāwe are in the forefront, and they are riding alongside us. The best word we came up with was āparallel.ā
Iām new to Arizona, but what Iāve gathered about the union is that membership has been low in the past. Just from talking to teachers, they donāt feel like we have any power, so why am I going to join the union? But I think thatās starting to change. People are saying, āMaybe I should be a part of this union, because there is power in numbers.ā
Iām motivated because I come from a big union in Chicago. I was paid well as a teacher. Iām used to having this supportive community of educators and people willing to fight for us. [Editorās Note: See How to Jump-Start Your Union: Lessons from the Chicago Teachers, to see how a fighting union won community support.] But when I moved here and I tried to find a job, I interviewed all over the placeāI must have had 15 different districts I interviewed atāand almost none of them would accept my credits. I was about to take a $35,000 pay cut if I accepted positions at one of these schools. Fortunately I found the one district that accepted all my years and all my credits, but I have to drive 60 miles a day to go there.
Teachers are fired up here because we actually have momentum this time. I heard a lot of comments: āI think itās going to stick this time. I think this time itās for real.ā Theyāve just seen this explosion of support, this explosion of membership on the pageāand they can see it.
MATERIALS TO USE
To help the site liaisons, we created some materials for them to use. We created a Google form that we sent out to everybody to gather membersā contact information. Personal email, personal phone number if they wanted to provide it, their name. So we can tally how many members weāve reached so far.
The liaisons get the Google form data from usāthen they hold meetings. Weāve asked them to hold one meeting so far; we call them 10-minute meetings.
We also gave them information on what to do:
- First fill out the Google form.
- Then have everybody sign up on Remind to get the reminder for your event.
- Hereās what your first meeting should look like.
- Then we gave them a PowerPoint with every piece of information they neededāslides of all the things they needed to know, so that if somebody asked a question, it was there. āWhy are we wearing red on Wednesday?ā āWhy are we here?ā āWhat can you do?ā āRules and guidelines for communication: donāt use your school materials; donāt use district emails.ā Instructions for our actions are also in our Google slides.
- And then of course a thank you, a little inspirational blurb.
If somebody comes to the site liaison with a question, the information is there, in the slides. That way they donāt have to look it up themselves.
Iām the site liaison at my school. I had nine people at my meeting, out of the 41 teachers I have in my school. But it was the day before spring break!
We are at 344 site liaisons. At our event Monday, we went around with a megaphone and said, āIf youāre not a liaison, come talk to me.ā From Monday to Tuesday, we increased by like 125 peopleāwe need two of us just to go through all the emails for site liaisons!
The Facebook group now has 33,000 members. Weāve been doing Facebook Live videos giving updates, and people really like that. Weāre using those to show teachers: hereās the people running the group, showing them weāre constantly working, constantly giving next steps.
We have organizational roles: marketing, communications, etc. Iām on the action support team. Weāve been looking at peopleās posts, scanning for leadersāyou can tell a leader by the way they communicate. Weāve been reaching out and asking people to step up. And now weāre asking site liaisons to set up āEducators Unitedā Facebook groups for their own schools, to discuss internal organizing.
ALLIES
The March for Our Lives, the students organizing against gun violence, is coming to Phoenix on March 24. Iām assuming a ton of us are going to be there.
Then weāre joining up with a grassroots group here called Save Our Schools Arizona, which is an anti-voucher group. Weāre going to do a joint event with them, a day of action March 28. We really want to get the community involved. Weāre going to team up and do a rally down at the Capitol.
I had some folks reach out to me and ask for our logos because they wanted to start an āArizona Parents Unitedā page. They just sent me the link for their new page, for parents!
About a strike, nothing is determined yet. Weāre considering more statewide action. But we are in the beginning stages of planning.
Rebecca Garelli is a seventh-grade math and science teacher in Phoenix, Arizona, and a leader in the Arizona Educators United group.
A group of Arizona teachers will be joining us at the Labor Notes Conference, along with teachers from West Virginia, Kentucky, and (we hope) Oklahoma!
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