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WEA members score big union wins!

02/28/2018
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Carla Naccarato-Sinclair
WEA higher ed leader Carla Naccarato-Sinclair shows her support for equal bargaining rights.

It took more than a decade, but WEA's higher education members have scored a huge victory for the freedom to negotiate fair pay.

On Feb. 27, the state Senate approved legislation granting community and technical college faculty the right to negotiate locally funded pay raises. Until now, they were the only public-sector workers in Washington who didn't have the right to negotiate salary increases from local funds.

The bill now goes to the state House of Representatives for a routine vote of concurrence, and then Gov. Jay Inslee is expected to sign it. It passed both houses with bipartisan support.

"I'm elated," said Carla Naccarato-Sinclair, president of WEA Association of Higher Education (AHE). "Finally we got a win for our community and technical college faculty members in the state. It has taken a long time to achieve the same bargaining rights as all the other educators in Washington.

"It's a union victory at a time we're under attack. It shows why we need to be part of WEA - we have a voice. If we didn't stand together as WEA members this would not have passed."

Faculty at Bellingham Technical College went on strike over pay several years ago. BTC instructor and longtime WEA member Lee Falta shared Naccarato-Sinclair's enthusiasm - she has helped bargain several contracts in the past.

"I'm pretty excited about it. It's a big relief," Falta said of the bill's passage. "Now I can go to the bargaining table and have something to talk about with the administration."

Winning equal bargaining rights for college faculty was WEA's top policy priority in this year's Unity Agenda, and the bill had major support within the labor community. College administrators and the anti-worker political group Freedom Foundation unsuccessfully fought against giving faculty equal bargaining rights.

The freedom to negotiate better salaries with local funding will provide stability and allow colleges to attract and keep quality faculty for their students.

Paraeducator bill improves training system

The Legislature also approved an important paraeducator training bill this week.

Substitute Senate Bill 6388 passed out of the House 98-0 yesterday. The bill makes adjustments to last year's landmark legislation that created a professional development system for paraeducators.

Paraeducators will now have an additional year to meet minimum employment standards.

'I'm here to get our point across to legislators'

Phyllis Campano Seattle
Seattle EA President Phyllis Campano and Seattle teacher Len Hill lobbied legislators to fully fund public schools.

On Feb. 28, nearly 100 WEA members and staff from around the state lobbied legislators in Olympia to pass a budget that increases funding for K-12 educator salaries as required by the Washington Supreme Court.

In November, the Court ordered lawmakers to increase funding for salaries by $1 billion in the upcoming 2018-19 school year. The Legislature adjourns March 8.

"I'm here to get our point across to legislators," said Len Hill, a Seattle Education Association member who teaches at Hawthorne Elementary in the district's south end. "It's very important, because without having a voice down here in Olympia, we're not going to get heard."

The additional state salary funding will help school districts provide professional, competitive base salaries, which are crucial to continue attracting and keeping qualified, committed, caring teachers and support staff for students across the state.

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