School Funding Rhetoric & Legal Battles; Remember Kansas City’s Spending Explosion…
Samantha Winslow, Alexandra Bradbury
Washington teachers waged rolling one-day strikes calling attention to decades of underfunding. Photo: WEA.
Lawmakers in Washington state are scrambling to get ready for a special session after the state’s highest court announced it will start charging a penalty of $100,000 per day while legislators continue illegally underfunding the public schools.
The court’s move comes on the heels of one-day strikes that rolled across the state this spring. Half the members of the Washington Education Association (WEA), in some 65 school districts covering 40,000 teachers, walked out—including on the state’s conservative side, east of the mountains.
The state’s attorney general claims teacher strikes are illegal, but that didn’t stop the teachers.
Picket signs read, “On Strike against Legislature,” highlighting that this strike was against the state government, not the school districts. In fact, some districts announced their support.
Money And School Performance: Lessons from the Kansas City Desegregation Experiment.