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Teachers Within NEA Fight for Life and Family
BY Gail Besse Register Correspondent
September 27-October 3, 2009 Issue |
Posted 9/18/09 at 7:04 AM
WASHINGTON â Catholic parents and
educators alarmed at the hostility toward traditional values in public schools
and the radical politics of the National Education Association are not alone.
Groups and individuals speaking up
for traditional values in education show no signs of backing off and often
appear as Davids against the Goliath NEA.
That union, which receives federal
funds and thrives on compulsory dues, passed resolutions this summer in support
of redefining marriage, against constitutional marriage-protection amendments,
for the repeal of the federal Defense of Marriage Act, and against voucher
plans and tuition tax credits.
But there are members like Sissy
Jochmann and Connie Bancroft who are determined to witness for the sanctity of
life and for Christ. Jochmann, a second-grade teacher from suburban Pittsburgh,
co-founded the NEA Conservative Educators Caucus in 2001. She had become aware
that some of her $800 annual dues to the NEA and its state affiliate
promoted abortion, pro-homosexuality curriculum and other causes and
candidates she couldnât support.
So
she became a delegate to the NEA regional assembly. In 2002 she proposed a
resolution asking the convention to consider programs that support those with
unwanted same-sex attraction, and not just programs affirming homosexuality.
âWhen
I stated that thousands of people leave homosexuality each year â ex-gays â
thatâs when nearly 9,000 delegates booed,â she said.
Bancroft,
from Damascus, Ohio, is executive director of Teachers Saving Children, a
15-year-old national pro-life network. Bancroft herself is an NEA member, but
the network is an independent entity that provides pro-life resources for
teachers, especially in health and science.
There
are also teachers like Jeralee Smith, an ex-lesbian who wants dialogue to be
respected on all sides of the controversial issue of homosexuality. Smith, who
teaches in Riverside, Calif., heard Jochmann speak on a Focus on the Family
radio show. Soon after, they and two other teachers founded the Conservative
Educators Caucus. It aims to uphold traditional values from âunwanted
compromise or abandonmentâ within the NEA.
Smith
also founded the California Teachers Empowerment Network, which provides
nonpartisan information on education policy and union options. In 2004 she
helped establish the NEA Ex-Gay Educators Caucus, which works âto eliminate
intolerance and discriminationâ against ex-gays and their supporters.
Watchdogs
All
these women say the views of NEA leadership are often at odds with many in the
rank and file. They want their colleagues to know what union dues support.
âOur
role is to be watchdogs on the inside and report to the conservative media,â
Smith explained. âWe say to other
teachers, âEither get in and put your mouth where your money is, or take it
out.â Weâre not passive; weâre pro-actively poking the leadership with a stick,
and it becomes news.â
There
are also independent alternative associations that, while not unions, offer
teachers professional development, insurance and legal protection.
These
organizations, with a combined national membership of 275,000, offer basic
protections.
For
example, the Christian Educators Association International provides $1 million
professional liability insurance and legal job action protection for $139 a
year. The associationâs executive director, Finn Laursen, said its main appeal
is its âChristian worldview.â
For
$180, the Association of American Educators offers $2 million in liability
insurance and legal assistance. âWeâre respected by our members more for what
we donât do. We donât get involved in politics or back candidates,â said its
executive director, Gary Beckner.
Just
how much countercultural voices are needed became apparent at this Julyâs
assembly. By a 61-39 vote, delegates rejected a Conservative Educators Caucus proposal
that would have ended the unionâs abortion advocacy.
According
to media reports, retiring general counsel Bob Chanin asked why âconservative
and right-wing bastardsâ are âafterâ the NEA. He answered his own question.
âBecause
we have power,â he said, âand we have power because there are more than 3.2
million people who are willing to pay us hundreds of millions of dollars in
dues each year.â
NEA
spokesmen declined repeated requests to comment on Chaninâs statement or on its
controversial agenda.
Twenty-seven
states are âclosed shops,â meaning 2 million teachers must accept union control
and cannot bargain individually with employers, according to a 2008 National
Institute for Labor Relations research study.
Roughly $2 billion in dues flows
annually into the NEA and the American Federation of Teachers, the other
national teachersâ union, according to the National Right to Work Legal Defense
Foundation, which counsels teachers on their union options.
Liberal Social Agenda
The NEAâs political division
committed up to $50 million toward 2008 election campaigns, according to the
congressional newspaper The Hill. One reason
the Conservative Caucus exists, according to its website, is to expose the
NEAâs liberal social agenda as being ânot in the best interest of the health
and welfare of children and families.â
Frustrated Catholic parents like
Claudia King in Massachusetts and Debbie Armenta in Ohio would agree with that
assessment. Both work at finding out how morally charged issues are presented
in school, but say theyâve been stonewalled, disrespected and outright lied to
by some school authorities.
âI feel we canât change much until
the majority of the people find that the liberal agenda is wrong,â King said.
She and Armenta discuss issues within a religious context with their children,
alert them to be discerning, and are vigilant at keeping communication open.
âMy children know theyâre to look
for the difference between actual facts and one personâs ideology,â Armenta
said. âWhat worries me is the constant insidious influence and slant of the
educational system.â
Gail Besse writes
from Boston.
NEA Conservative
Educators Caucus:
(888) 299-6158, CECCentral.org
NEA Ex-Gay Caucus: (888) 532-4678,
NEA-ExGay.org
Teachers Saving Children: (330) 821
2747, TeachersSavingChildren.org
California Teachers Empowerment
Network: (888) 290-8471,
CTENHome.org
Christian Educators Association International: (888) 798-1124,
CEAI.org
Association of American Educators:
(800) 704-7799, AAETeachers.org
More at NCRegister.com
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