Click this link to learn more about how you can take action with the AFT on these issues!
THRIVE Act, SD.2067 and HD.3162.
If passed this bill will create law to end current district receiverships and prohibit future ones. It will create a better, more bottom up, and democratic process for supporting, not punishing, schools in need of assistance by rewriting Section 1J of Chapter 69. Eliminate the MCAS as the basis for the high school graduation requirement and replace it with coursework certified by the district.
This training session is to educate, mobilize and organize members to share information out.
Please join us in sending some of your most active members to our coalitions “train the trainer” for educators on the following dates:
Wednesday, March 8, 4:30pm-6:30pm (for educators): bit.ly/thrivettt030823
Thursday, March 16, 4:30pm-6:30pm (for educators): bit.ly/thrivettt031623
The Fair Share Amendment PASSED!
The Fair Share Amendment was on the ballot in November of 2022. It adds a 4 cents tax to each dollar of earnings over ONE MILLION dollars per year. This new state revenue can be used to fund the Student Opportunity Act, public transportation, and other important needs in Massachusetts.
Click HERE to learn more!
An education bill filed on January 20, 2023, has the potential to transform the educational landscape for generations to come, bettering the lives of students and harnessing the knowledge and assets of local communities to improve schools, according to AFT Massachusetts President Beth Kontos and other education leaders.
The bill, An Act Empowering Students and Schools To Thrive (or the Thrive Act, for short), would equip local communities with the tools and resources that students and schools need to succeed, and dramatically reduce the harm caused by the high-stakes, punitive use of standardized tests, such as state takeovers and denying students high school diplomas.
Consider using our advocacy tool to email your state representative and state senator urging them to co-sponsor the Thrive Act! https://aftmassachusetts.tiny.us/PasstheThrive
With the passage of the Fair Share Amendment, Massachusetts has an opportunity to build a public higher education system that lives up to our values and prepares Massachusetts students to be active, engaged participants in their communities, the workforce, and our society,” said AFT Massachusetts President Beth Kontos. “Students today are struggling with the cost of college and a lack of adequate support services, while adjunct educators struggle with low pay and limited benefits. Our public college campuses have insufficient funding to address crumbling buildings, rising student needs, and staffing shortages. We’re pleased to support the Higher Ed for All campaign to reverse the budget cuts that have occurred over the past several decades, and begin rebuilding a truly public state college and university system.”
“As we move away from the worst of the COVID pandemic, the impacts of over a year away from the classroom are becoming more and more evident,” said Grant O’Rielly, President of the UMass Faculty Federation. “The absence of social contacts with their friends and peers, as well as missing frequent and meaningful interactions with teachers in their classes, have left students ill-prepared as they have returned to in-person learning. This is particularly true in colleges and universities where the need for support services in mental health counseling as well as quality academic tutoring (not just "homework help sessions") has increased significantly." READ MORE.