Spanning generations, the Women’s Rights Breakfast showcased the strength of AFT women regardless of their age. Organized by the AFT Women’s Rights Committee, which honored Hillary Clinton earlier in the convention with its annual Women’s Rights Award, the breakfast featured Living the Legacy awards for AFT members who have served 50, 40 and 30 years at the AFT and in their communities—including AFT Vice President Marietta English (below, at right), the chair of the committee. The event also hosted a young speaker, AFT-Fayette (W.Va.) President Tega Toney, who shared her experience as a union leader during the teacher protests in West Virginia.
AFT Executive Vice President Mary Cathryn Ricker framed Toney’s work in West Virginia as the beginning of the “2018 Spring of School Unrest,” a movement that eventually involved teachers across the nation protesting for better resources, salaries and working conditions for themselves and their students.
“This past winter, West Virginia teachers got a little fired up,” said Toney (pictured below), who is a social studies teacher and an AFT-West Virginia executive board member. “We got a little fed up.” Stuck with low salaries for years, they finally got a 2 percent raise, but their once-robust health benefits had become so costly they canceled out the increase. The bottom line was a reduction in pay.
Toney recalled the rich labor history of West Virginia, where bombs were dropped on striking coal miners and where workers and their families fought for years against abusive coal barons and coal bosses. Union teachers bring that same fierceness to their battles today—and many of them, union leaders included, are women. Teachers drove for miles across West Virginia’s rolling and difficult terrain to stand in the state capital and protest by the thousands during a strike that lasted nearly two weeks last winter. “We chanted so long that our voices cracked and our throats burned,” said Toney.
Working against bad policy was not new for AFT-West Virginia educators. When the state Legislature went majority Republican in 2014, “anti-public education legislators made their intent clear,” said Toney, pushing charter school legislation, vouchers and union-busting policy. “We pushed back,” she said, “but we were actually practicing for the big game. We were going to need it in 2018.”
While the strike was a hardship, teachers continued to watch out for “their” kids, the students. They set up food banks and used schools buses to deliver food to their families’ doors. And they had support: “Communities, civic organizations, churches, families, parents and businesses brought food, brought little heaters,” said Toney.
The strike in West Virginia was a success and lit a movement of educators across the country, but, Toney said, the work is not over. “In a world where the mantra is profits over people, we must move with boldness and tenacity and ferocity and in solidarity and with purpose,” she said.
[Virginia Myers, photos by Pam Wolfe]
Living the Legacy Awards 2018
Diamond recognition: 50 years
Vi Curry, Philadelphia Federation of Teachers and AFT Pennsylvania
Mary D’Ercole Pritchard, Schenectady (N.Y.) Federation of Teachers, Retiree Council 12
Joan Devlin, Boston Teachers Union
Marietta English, Baltimore Teachers Union
Kathy Genzmen, Toledo (Ohio) Federation of Teachers
Linda Harris, Philadelphia Federation of Teachers and AFT Pennsylvania
Shirley Kane, Baltimore Teachers Union
Arlene Kempin, Philadelphia Federation of Teachers and AFT Pennsylvania
Edith LeWin, Buffalo (N.Y.) Teachers Union
Nuala McGann-Drescher, United University Professions (New York)
Violet Mitchell-Cousins, Baltimore Teachers Union
Veronica O’Connor, Pelham (N.Y.) Teachers Association
Shelly Snyder, Philadelphia Federation of Teachers and AFT Pennsylvania
Linda Wagner Doerr, Lakeland (N.Y.) Federation of Teachers
Rosalie Watkins, Baltimore Teachers Union
Gold recognition: 40 years
Sara Attleson, Albuquerque (N.M.) Federation of Teachers
Sandra Baler-Segan, Boston Teachers Union
Denise Berkley, Boston Teachers Union
Juanita Campbell, Baltimore Teachers Union
Brenda Chaney, Boston Teachers Union
Sandra Erickson, West Suburban (Ill.) Teachers Union
Marilyn Flowers-Marion, Boston Teachers Union
Gloria Garrett, Baltimore Teachers Union
Mary Gaughan, Boston Teachers Union
Gussie Goodman, Baltimore Teachers Union
Vicki Honeycutt, Northville (Mich.) Federation of Paraeducators
Irene Kanowitz, Somers (N.Y.) Faculty Association, NYSUT RC15/16
Ava Parran, Baltimore Teachers Union
Debby Pope, Chicago Teachers Union
Barb Randall-Saleh, Tacoma (Wash.) Federation of Paraeducators
Hattie Rhames, Baltimore Teachers Union
Linda Steward, Baltimore Teachers Union
Barbara Ann Supinka, Pittsburgh Federation of Teachers and AFT Pennsylvania
Freda Sydnor-Joell, Philadelphia Federation of Teachers
Silver recognition: 30 years
Donna Adame, Boston Teachers Union
Emily Adeshigbin, Philadelphia Federation of Teachers
Roslyn Avant, Boston Teachers Union
Patricia Baker, New York State Public Employees Federation
Patricia Boughton, Chicago Teachers Union
Cynthia Bruce, Baltimore Teachers Union
Caren Carew, Boston Teachers Union
Denise Conrad, Toledo (Ohio) Federation of Teachers
Doris Dodson, New York State Public Employees Federation
Anne Goldman, United Federation of Teachers (New York City)
Theresa Guerriere, New Jersey City University
Norine Gutekanst, Chicago Teachers Union
Maxine Holmes, City Union of Baltimore
Cheryl Kelly, Boston Teachers Union
Josefina Lascano, Boston Teachers Union
Gayle Marrow, Boston Teachers Union
Ruth Pajouhandeh, City Union of Baltimore
Sheryl Pedone, Boston Teachers Union
Kristen Pinto, Boston Teachers Union
Nadia Resnikoff, Middle Country (N.Y.) Teachers Association
Dana Royster-Buefort, Boston Teachers Union
Gaya Shakes, Rochester (N.Y.) Teachers Association
Linda Simonetti, Boston Teachers Union
Tara Stamps, Chicago Teachers Union
Jacquelyn Ward, Chicago Teachers Union
Alice Yong, Boston Teachers Union