To the esteemed citizens and residents of Colorado:
I am a teacher and on Friday, April 27th, 2018, I will demonstrate with thousands of my colleagues at our State Capital in Denver. I am excited about the collective energy, but I want to tell you that I would much rather be in class with my students. Not because my job is easy, but exactly because it is hard. The success of my students is the center of my life. I love my family most, but my weakness is I leave the best part of myself at my school.
So, to explain this action, I want to clarify some things, because there is a lot of misunderstanding out there. This is not a strike. This is not a walkout. I am not in conflict with my employers, and I am not unhappy with my career. I am using my own earned general leave time with the approval of my school and district leadership to fulfill my responsibility as an education advocate for the good of my students, your and my children included.
Yes, there are personal stakes for me and my family. Teachers have lost ground for a decade. Since 2008, we have endured years of pay freezes, increases in our share of health insurance premiums, additional uncompensated work responsibilities, larger class sizes and reductions in retirement benefits. There has been no recovery for teachers and other workers since the Great Recession. Now, the cuts continue despite a booming economy in Colorado. What will happen in the next recession?
But the stakes are higher than just my job. High quality, universal and public education are necessary for the reproduction of healthy, happy and honorable society. To attract the best of the rising generation, we must provide districts with the funding they need to properly compensate and supply all of our teachers. It is something all Coloradans benefit from, whether or not they have their own children in public school. Do we want everyone in our state to be skilled and informed, or don’t we? And we need to keep attracting the warmest hearts and brightest minds to the teaching profession. This is not distant or theoretical. We hire for hard to fill positions every year, and new candidates are getting increasingly hard to find.
What we are demanding is for the Colorado legislature to prioritize the education of children. In Colorado, state tax increases must be approved by a statewide popular vote, but corporate tax giveaways are simple legislative matters. This has constricted the state budget year after year, and education funding has been the shrinking waist of fiscal belt-tightening. Eventually, a statewide vote will be needed to increase revenue through taxation in order to properly run all the needs of the state budget. But, meanwhile, education funding has to be the clear priority. They can do that by committing state budget increases to education at an expeditious rate, at least until education is funded at pre-recession levels. The crisis is here, and now the population knows it. This will go a very long way to a thorough solution through popular sovereignty by voting.
We can make a difference, but only together. This is not a group of selfish interests grasping for what others need. This is the servants of the beloved community standing up bravely for the interests of the vast majority, and for the future. This is a movement not just for teachers, but for all families, workers, and everyone who wants a brighter, more educated future, where everyone is included. Join us please, if you can. If you live in Colorado, call your state representatives to ask where they stand on education funding and demand they make it a priority. https://leg.colorado.gov/find-my-legislator It will make you feel good to be involved because your voice is power, and “We the People” are strong. Then, on election day, vote.
With sincere thanks to you, and to my teachers who taught me,
Kevin O'Donnell

