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All of West Virginia’s teachers are on strike. Here’s why

February 24, 2018 by  
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West Virginia’s teachers strike entered its second day Friday, as educators from public schools across the state continued to protest at the statehouse over wages and health insurance.

Teachers started striking Thursday, a day after Republican West Virginia Gov. Jim Justice signed a 2 percent pay increase for teachers for the next fiscal year, and a 1 percent pay increase for the two subsequent fiscal years. Teachers said the increase still wouldn’t keep up with their rising health care costs.

Teachers indicated the strike would continue through Monday. Here’s what you need to know:

Why are teachers angry?

Teachers across the state argued that the pay increase did not do enough to offset the rising health care premiums from the state Public Employee Insurance Agency, at the same time that their benefits are getting slashed in the state budget.

The average starting salary for a West Virginia public school teacher is $32,435, and the average salary is $44,701, according to the West Virginia Education Association (WVEA). West Virginia teacher pay ranks 48th in the United States, the Associated Press reported.

“I don’t think we’re asking for anything that’s way out of line,” Charleston South High School teacher Joe Oliver told the PBS NewsHour. “Just give us what we deserve.”

Oliver, who teaches computer science, photography, and TV and media studies, is one of thousands of teachers striking in all 55 counties across the state. A swath of those teachers and their supporters rallied at the West Virginia statehouse on Thursday, and protests continued in the capital and across the state on Friday.

When Oliver marched on the West Virginia Capitol with other teachers on Thursday, he said cars whizzing by waved and honked in support of the demonstrating educators.

“We have the community behind us,” he said.

The teachers are barred from using their work email and social media, so coordination has been mostly through word of mouth, Oliver said. Other educators at South Charleston High School and the teacher’s union notified him after classes let out on Wednesday that the strike would take place, Oliver said.

It’s the first statewide teachers strike since 1990, when teachers protested similar wage issues.

The state’s response

After signing the pay raise bill Wednesday, Justice issued a statement saying that the state Public Employees Insurance Agency (PEIA) agreed to freeze health insurance rates for 16 months “while we examine it and enact a long-term solution to the PEIA problems.”

“We need to keep our kids and teachers in the classroom,” Justice said. “We certainly recognize our teachers are underpaid and this is a step in the right direction to addressing their pay issue.”

West Virginia Attorney General Patrick Morrisey, a Republican, also issued a statement on Wednesday calling the strike unlawful and threatening to take legal action.

“Let us make no mistake, the impending work stoppage is unlawful,” Morrisey said. “We also stand ready to assist and support any county board of education or county superintendent as they enforce the law.”

“Breaking the law does not set a good example for our children,” he added.

The West Virginia House of Delegates voted to send $29 million from the state’s rainy day fund to pay for the health insurance rate freeze. That bill awaits a vote in the state senate. The state House also unanimously passed a bill which would set aside 20 percent of budget surpluses for a separate fund to stabilize PEIA, the AP reported. Teachers and their allies have voiced skepticism that the measures are permanent fixes.

What’s next?

On Friday, union leaders from the American Federation of Teachers-West Virginia, West Virginia School Service Personnel Association and WVEA announced the strike would continue on Monday.

“Our members have spoken,” WVEA President Dale Lee told reporters in Charleston on Friday. “The education employees are not prepared to go back to work yet,” he said.

Oliver, who has been teaching in West Virginia at the high school and collegiate levels for nearly two decades, said he hoped the state legislature and unions would be able to reach a solution soon so he can go back to work.

“I don’t want to drag this out,” Oliver said. “I want to give the kids an education that they deserve.”

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Siblings allegedly held captive by parents are ‘starting to make plans for their future’: Mayor

February 24, 2018 by  
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Some of the 13 siblings allegedly held captive by their parents in their California home are “starting to make plans for their future,” Corona Mayor Karen Spiegel told ABC News today.

“Their minds are just being opened,” she said, to “having a choice and not being so controlled.”

The young adult victims are now “getting up and making the day happen for themselves, getting out of bed and deciding what they want to eat.”

PHOTO: Louise and David Turpin were arrested in the torture and child endangerment case in Perris, Calif.David Allen Turpin/ Facebook
Louise and David Turpin were arrested in the torture and child endangerment case in Perris, Calif.

“They’re starting from very elementary stuff,” she said, but have “progressed very, very well.”

David and Louise Turpin are accused of abusing their children, including in some cases allegedly forcing them to shower only once a year, shackling them and beating them routinely, prosecutors said. The victims weren’t released from their chains even to go to the bathroom, according to prosecutors.

When found last month, the children hadn’t been to a doctor in over four years and had never been to a dentist, prosecutors said.

PHOTO: Louise and David Turpin were arrested in the torture and child endangerment case in Perris, Calif.David Allen Turpin/ Facebook
Louise and David Turpin were arrested in the torture and child endangerment case in Perris, Calif.

The Turpins were arrested in January after the couple’s 17-year-old daughter escaped the home and alerted authorities.

All the children except for the youngest, a toddler, were severely malnourished, prosecutors said. The eldest victim — a 29-year-old woman — weighed only 82 pounds when rescued.

David and Louise Turpin have each been charged with 12 counts of torture, 12 counts of false imprisonment, seven counts of abuse of a dependent adult and six counts of child abuse. David Turpin was also charged with one count of a lewd act on a child under the age of 14 by force, fear or duress. They have pleaded not guilty.

The Turpins made a brief appearance in court today, where neither spoke. They will return for a settlement conference hearing set for March 23. Three additional charges of abuse were filed against both David and Louise Turpin today, and one new count of felony assault was filed against just Louise Turpin.

They pleaded not guilty to all new charges.

PHOTO: Louise Anna Turpin appears in court for arraignment with attorneys on Jan. 18, 2018 in Riverside, Calif.Gina Ferazzi, Pool via Getty Images
Louise Anna Turpin appears in court for arraignment with attorneys on Jan. 18, 2018 in Riverside, Calif.

PHOTO: David Allen Turpin appears in court for arraignment with attorneys on Jan. 18, 2018 in Riverside, Calif.Frederic J. Brown, Pool via Getty Images
David Allen Turpin appears in court for arraignment with attorneys on Jan. 18, 2018 in Riverside, Calif.

Meanwhile, the siblings are recovering in hospitals.

The adult victims have Skyped with their younger siblings as they have been separated to two different hospitals, Spiegel said, adding that they have put on weight.

Some of the siblings “didn’t really know what a toothbrush was used for,” Spiegel said.

Some of the victims had never had shoes, Spiegel said, recounting how when one boy was given his first shoes, they were too tight, but he wouldn’t relinquish them until a bigger pair arrived because he was scared he would never get shoes back.

Spiegel described the young adult victims as “so loving and warm and affectionate,” and said they appreciate the “things we take for granted.”

PHOTO: Attorney Jeff Moore speaks with Louise Turpin as she and David Turpin appear in court in Riverside, Calif., on Feb. 23, 2018. Damian Dovarganes/Pool via Reuters
Attorney Jeff Moore speaks with Louise Turpin as she and David Turpin appear in court in Riverside, Calif., on Feb. 23, 2018.

ABC News’ Alyssa Pone contributed to this report.

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