Okay, here we go…..
Randi Weingarten is the head of the AFT(American Federation of Teachers) and is a POS that did everything she could to keep teachers at home during Covid.
https://jonathanturley.org/2025/03/...ngarten-finally-said-the-quiet-part-out-loud/
You are correct, my wife was a teacher. Close to 40 years total, and you would not be able to find a better, more dedicated teacher. She loved her kids, all of them, and literally gave her life for them. More on that later. She was one who did always bring home papers to correct and doing planning/prep for upcoming lessons. She was so good at her job that she was recruited from elementary level to the junior high to plan, implement, manage, and teach a new program for at risk kids. She worked her ass for them, doing everything she could to teach them, guide them, even rescue them. She shared her personal cell # with them with the instructions to call her any time of the day or night when they were in a situation that they needed to be rescued. I will tell you that there were quite a number of times that she/we went out to get one of those kids, some middle of the night, some quite a ways away, one to bring in her student and three siblings to our house for 4 days over Eater weekend because the parents were beating the shit out of each other and the deputies had nowhere else for the kids to go. Yeah, she worked her ass off for those kids, and she had plenty of insight to many of the other teachers that were skating through.
My wife retired 15+ years ago, so it is possible, but highly unlikely that practices have changed since she was there. Yes, the school day is a contracted 7 hours, but if the contracted arrival and departure times are not enforced (which they weren’t), the slackers will take advantage of being there less time than they are being paid for. And to your point about all the extra work done at home and after contracted time, my wife was usually the last to leave and she said that very seldom did she see other teachers taking work home. When they have time before 1st bell and after dismissal, PLUS a contracted 50 minute planning period every day, not a lot for most of them to do after that when they teach the same lesson every class period. BTW, when teaching the at risk kids she had the same kids all day so had to prepare lessons for every subject!
Washington State dictates that every school district must have 180 days per year of instruction. There used to be only 2 days prior to the start of instruction that teachers were required to be at to prepare their rooms for the coming year. Of course, with no students those days, long lunches were common. And browsing through the TSD official schedule, you can easily see that at least one day per month is lost due to early releases every single Friday. All that has been bargained for by the union over the years and ends up hurting the students due to the loss of actual instructional time with the teachers. The contract says that there are 4 planned “make-up” days. I assume that this is how you come up with 186 days, but that is a misinterpretation because it is not 4 additional days of instruction, it is simply to account for power outages, snow closures, etc. And you know what-as someone that worked a 2080/2088 annual schedule, I also had many hours of work done at home or after normal work days. So I ain’t going to cry a river for teachers that might have to grade a few papers at home. Something I actually did for my wife once in a while. Ha!
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Per the TSD TEA Certified Salary Schedule, you are correct about the starting salary being under $70,000. But that is misleading, since the base of $68,665 has a Professional Responsibility Stipend (for work at home?) of $3090 added to it, so the actual starting compensation is $71,755. In addition, by doing only 28 hours of professional development the starting salary then becomes $73, 227. So even if you allow an average of 8 hours worked per day for 182 days (which is extremely unlikely), everyone will do the 28 hours to max out their rate, which then means the average pay per hour is still just over $50 for the 1456 hours that I will allow for arguments sake, even though very few of the teachers will actually be working that many hours. Remember, that is omitting all those 90 minute early releases on every Friday, plus half day releases prior to vacations and holidays. In reality my previous # of hours worked will be a lot less than your claim. And I say that a salary that works out to over $50/hour worked for a start is pretty darn good.
Now for this part I will try to control myself a bit, but no guarantee on that as I go through a response to your suggestion of a “bogus grievance”. I mentioned above how my wife gave her life for her students, and it is actually true. See, back in the late 1990’s she became very ill. Turns out that the incompetent management in the district had allowed toxic mold to permeate her building and after a few years it really got her. She ended up being bedridden for a long time and suffered the effects of the mold exposure bad enough that she was off work for two years. If you question how bad it could be, go ahead and look up the effects of toxic mold, especially stachybotris, the black mold. I guarantee you would not want anyone in your family to be exposed to it. She suffered the after effects of that mold exposure even after “recovery”, as it was not ever a complete recovery. So due to the effects of the mold, and how poorly she was treated by the district, she had to retire early, meaning we had to purchase tens of thousands of retirement credits to get the full benefit. Those lost two years made a big difference. And you know what? That union did not do a single ****ing thing to help her or to push the district to protect the other employees OR the students in that building. They didn’t give a shit at all, but hey-at least the members are getting paid and are giving the local union and NEA a bunch of money that they could use for lobbying! Yea!
And it is not a story of “All’s well that ends well” either. And then 6-7 years after retiring, she had pneumonia and then was diagnosed with another lung disease. So then it was all downhill, as it became more and more debilitating for her. There was no cure, all you could do was try to be as comfortable as possible, which I did the best I could as her caregiver. She died at age 70 in 2020, and with parents that passed away at 92 and 97, how many years of life do you think she was cheated out of by the incompetence of that school district that cared for their buildings so poorly? Yes, quite a few and I certainly have a bunch of bitterness in me towards that district, the union, and the WA L&I program. **** them all!