Spanish School Teachers Strike
September 20th, 2011
Anger over government austerity measures spread Tuesday to Spain’s education system, as public secondary school teachers in Madrid went on strike to protest staff cuts.
The work stoppage in some 300 schools is to last at least two days and perhaps three, and teachers elsewhere in the country also plan strikes or protests this month against budget cuts.
“We are on strike to improve state education. It is not true that we are on strike because we have to work more. The timetable is the same as we had last year. What we want is better conditions for public teaching,” Pilar Hortal, a 57-year-old English teacher standing at a picket line in Madrid said.
The teachers’ branch of the UGT union said most Madrid teachers were honoring the strike call.
Education in Spain is largely run by regional governments, many of which are debt-laden. The one in Madrid hopes to save 80 million Euro with staffing cuts. It and the others making budget cuts are mostly run by the conservative Popular Party.
The central government of Socialist Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero, which has enacted austerity measures of its own, opposes education cuts.
The strike’s immediate trigger was an order from the Madrid regional government forcing teachers to give two extra hours of classwork per week, going from 18 up to 20. Their actual work week remains unchanged at 37.5 hours.
According to The Associated Press, unions say the extra classroom hours mean several thousand backup or temporary teachers will not be hired this year. Teachers will have less time to prepare classes or meet with students and parents, and can’t use auxiliary colleagues to break big classes up into smaller groups for tricker subjects like science or foreign languages.
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