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From the schoolhouse to the state house: These 5 teachers are running for office to say ‘No more’ to slashed education funding

Laura Fay | September 4, 2018



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(Photo: Bill Pugliano/Getty Images)

If you don’t count high school student body president, Aimy Steele has never held political office. But as a teacher and school administrator, she’s run classrooms and schools, and now she’s running to represent her district in North Carolina’s state house of representatives.

Steele and thousands of teachers around the country got a taste of politics this spring when they staged rallies and walkouts to demand higher pay and more funding for their classrooms. Many of those same teachers and their colleagues from around the state are now running for office, hoping to bring their energy, experience, and penchant for compromise to Congress, statehouses, and other political offices around the country.

These teachers represent both major parties and have a range of specialties and experiences. They’re worried about school safety, teacher pensions, equity for students from poor neighborhoods and those with disabilities, and adequate funding for classroom technology. Yet, they all seem to agree that teachers have something to bring to the legislative table that’s currently missing. Many, but not all, of the teachers on the ballot this election cycle are from red states that saw teacher walkouts this year, including Kentucky, Arizona, and Oklahoma.

The corps of teacher-candidates has seen some high-profile wins this year, such as R. Travis Brenda defeating a rising Republican star for a nomination in Kentucky, and also some defeats, notably in Nevada’s primary gubernatorial contest.

“I think you’re seeing teachers from across the country that are standing up and saying,  ‘No more. We’re not going to see our students getting taken advantage of and our budgets get slashed and our benefits get slashed,’” Joe Bisaccia, candidate for the state legislature in Arizona, told The 74.  “I’m proud to be a part of it and I think that we’re going to see some positive change in November, I really do.”

SUSAN RUBIO, California

Susan Rubio was inspired to run for a state Senate seat in the San Gabriel Valley after she worked on her sister’s winning campaign for the state Assembly in 2016.

Rubio, a Democrat, has been a teacher and administrator for 17 years and has also served as a clerk and city council member. She has several priorities for education in California: more school counselors, equitable access to technology for all students, smaller class sizes, and more support for teachers. One of the reasons Rubio decided to run for office was because of how much she and her colleagues were being run down as teachers, she said.

Teachers have been “screaming for help” the past few years and now they want to “be part of the solution,” Rubio told The 74.

Rubio will face Democrat Mike Eng in the general election. She is taking a leave of absence from her classroom from September to November; if she is elected, her temporary replacement will stay for the remainder of the year, but Rubio will take her job back if she does not win.

Rubio echoed the sentiments of many teachers-turned-candidates when she said she was tired of watching the same problems continue year after year in her community.

“It’s becoming increasingly difficult to … sit back and just continue to watch the same things over and over again without having the ability to effect change,” she said.

JOE BISACCIA, Arizona

Bisaccia, 27, is a Democrat running to represent Arizona’s District 12 in the state House of Representatives. Although he has only been teaching for one year — he previously worked in broadcast news and technology sales — he decided to run for office shortly after the school year started. He realized right away that his school, Cooley Middle School, was short on materials his classroom needed.

“I was really fed up with the constant lack of resources that we had as teachers, and it was beyond just the really low salaries that we have out in Arizona,” he said. “I teach an applied technology and robotics class, and in order for me to even have enough equipment to even teach my class, I had to get lucky and apply for a $5,000 grant. … So that, to me, was a failure of our leaders at the state level to adequately fund the public education system.”

Bisaccia’s priority is to create a sustainable funding stream for Arizona education, which he said will require comprehensive tax reform and possibly a constitutional amendment to revamp the budget process.

Bisaccia will return to his classroom in the fall and will make a decision about the rest of the year after election day.

R. TRAVIS BRENDA, Kentucky

R. Travis Brenda, 43, is a high school math teacher and a Republican running for state representative in Kentucky’s 71st District. Brenda’s primary victory against Kentucky House Majority Floor Leader Jonathan Shell, who had the endorsement of Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, garnered national attention in May.

Shell was seen as a key proponent of a change to Kentucky’s public employee pension system enacted earlier this year, which changes the pension framework for new teachers, giving them a hybrid pension-401K plan and requiring more years of work before they can retire. Brenda, whose mother is a retired state employee and whose sister is also a teacher in Kentucky, is concerned about the pension issue, which was a focus of this year’s teacher walkouts and which will now go to court. Brenda participated in the rallies in Frankfurt when his school was closed to accommodate them.

Brenda was planning to run for office before the teacher rallies and walkouts that rocked Kentucky this spring; he said he has felt called to represent his community in the legislature since a back to school prayer service at his church in August.

Brenda said the large number of teachers running for office is an indication that people are starting to pay more attention to the political process and what elected officials are doing.

“I think it’s exciting, I think people are finally waking up,” he said.

Brenda, who has taught high school math and engineering in Rockcastle County for 19 years, has not previously run for elected office. He plans to return to his classroom full time at the end of the summer. If he wins, he said, he will work out a plan with his principal and superintendent to be in class as much as he can and ensure students are receiving high-quality instruction when he cannot be in class.

DONNA LAWLOR, Kentucky

Donna Lawlor, 62, is a retired teacher who has taught Spanish and English as a second language, served as an American Sign Language interpreter in the classroom, and worked at the Illinois School for the Deaf. She’s also a Republican running to represent Kentucky’s District 35 in the state house of representatives.

Lawlor said she is running to represent minority groups and because she understands the budget and education issues at stake.

“Why not a woman who is fluent in two minority group languages, and then also an educator?” she asked, noting that there were too many “men of the caucasian kind” in the legislature.

This is Lawlor’s fourth run for the seat. She’s previously served as a district commissioner in Jefferson County, Kentucky, also an elected position. She did not participate in the teacher strikes this year and sees running for office as a more positive step toward solving problems.

Lawlor, who is hard of hearing herself, hopes if elected to advocate for deaf and hard of hearing adults and children.

In the general election, Lawlor will face Democrat Lisa Willner, a school board member, part-time college professor, and advocate for public education.

AIMY STEELE, North Carolina

Steele, 38, is an elementary school principal running as a Democrat to represent District 82 in North Carolina’s state House of Representatives. She previously taught middle and high school Spanish classes and served as an assistant principal. One of the reasons Steele’s running for office is to “restore order” to North Carolina’s public education system. She pointed to unfunded mandates, such as a maximum class size in the lower grades that she claims stretched schools and teachers beyond their means, as evidence that some of the state’s current policies negatively affect students and their schools. (The class size policy was enacted last year and later delayed to give schools more time to implement the change).

When she talks about participating in a teacher rally at the state capitol in May and running for office, Steele repeats a word seldom associated with politics: joy.

“Knowing that my fellow colleagues are choosing to take on this next step of our journey, the ability or the calling to run for office, just makes me feel very happy, very honored,” she said. “I’m elated to have the opportunity and to be able to be working with other teachers” during the campaign.

Steele will not return to her post as principal when school resumes. She ran uncontested for the Democratic nomination in North Carolina’s primary May 8.


This article was published in partnership with The 74.

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