Home Local News School districts announce closures as teachers plan May 1 march

School districts announce closures as teachers plan May 1 march

RALEIGH — Once again teachers will descend on the state capital to call for more public school funding, Medicaid expansion, and a $15 minimum wage for all school workers.

The North Carolina Association of Educators, in partnership with several other advocacy groups, is planning a teacher march May 1 in downtown Raleigh.

Because so many teachers have requested time off, some school districts have announced plans to make May 1 an optional teacher work day. On April 8, Durham Public Schools announced its intention to cancel classes. More than 550 teachers have asked for time off for the start of May.

“On a typical day in May, DPS has 213 teachers absent. We are able to muster approximately 167 substitute teachers on such a day,” the district said in a news release. “At this time, given the lack of available substitute teachers and the likelihood of more requests for personal leave, it will not be possible to have adequate student supervision or instruction on that date.”

Chapel Hill-Carrboro City Schools and Lexington City Schools are also canceling classes for May 1.

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State Superintendent Mark Johnson has urged march organizers to pick another day for the event.

“The protest organizers should choose a non-school day,” Johnson said in a statement. “The legislature will be in session in Raleigh for at least another three months, a time period that spans dozens of days students are not scheduled to be in school, including spring break and summer break.”

Johnson voiced concerns that closing schools would undermine classroom instruction and hurt students who rely on schools for meals.

The focus of the march includes several demands:

  • Provide enough school librarians, psychologists, social workers, counselors, nurses, and other health professionals to meet national standards.
  • Provide a $15 minimum wage for all school personnel, 5% raise for all ESPs (non-certified staff), teachers, admin, and a 5% cost of living adjustment for retirees.
  • Expand Medicaid to “improve the health of our students and families.”
  • Reinstate state retiree health benefits eliminated by the General Assembly in 2017
  • Restore advanced degree compensation raises ended by the General Assembly in 2013

Thousands of teachers marched at the legislative complex last year, demanding higher per-student spending, increased educator pay, and for a moratorium on school choice options. At least 40 school districts and one Durham charter school closed for the May 16 march and rally. More than 60 percent of North Carolina students didn’t have school that day.



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