Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
West Virginia’s teachers’ union wins battle to prevent educational choice
West Virginia’s teachers’ union wins battle to prevent educational choice
Dec 28, 2025 1:21 AM

This week, roughly 19,000 West Virginia teachers went on strike, closing down every public school in the state in a united resistance against educational choice. Now, after only two days, the strike is over, with the legislation in question dead on arrival in the state House.

It marks a defeat against student opportunity and a victory for union-induced conformity and the dismal status quo of public education in West Virginia—a state that consistently sits at the bottom of nation-wide education rankings.

In addition to raising teacher pay by five percent, the proposed law, Senate Bill 451, would have allowed for the establishment of charter schools and state-sponsored education savings accounts—features that neither the teachers’ union nor Republican Gov. Jim Justice would abide. “For crying out loud,” Justice said. “We have to concentrate on our public schools.”

Yet, as Senate President Mitch Carmichael noted, such a move isn’t about dismantling or ignoring standard public schools, the teachers of which would have gotten a pay raise through the bill. It’s about creating more educational opportunity and dynamism across the state, which would serve to benefit public schools in the long-term, should they rise to the challenge.

“There is a vital need to reform West Virginia’s education system, and I do not believe that any true es through a pay raise alone,” Carmichael said. “Our families petition, choice, and flexibility.”

There’s a moral argument to this, of course—that regardless of es, families ought to have a say in how their taxpayer money is used in their child’s education. There’s a moral cost when government constrains human freedom and inhibits the development of distinct and diverse munities. It’s about far more than budgetary concerns.

But there’s a practical argument, as well—that expanding school choice brings a wide range of educational and economic benefits, both to students and public institutions. According to data from a growing number of studies, it’s an argument that has robust empirical support.

At a recent Acton event, J.C. Huizenga, founder of National Heritage Academies and a member of the Acton Institute Board of Directors, summarized some of this evidence, highlighting the educational and fiscal results of public vs. charter schools.

Huizenga points to a study by researchers at the University of Michigan’s Gerald R. Ford School of Public Policy, which found that children who attended one of his National Heritage Academy charter schools performed better in math and reading than those in public schools.

Further, citing a recent study from the Mackinac Center, ”Doing More with Less: The Charter School Advantage in Michigan,” Huizenga notes the return on investment to taxpayers from educational diversity—a return that could then be funneled and re-invested back into educational institutions and resources, if taxpayers so desired.

“Charter schools are funded at a discount of $2,782,” Huizenga explains. “…Based on that number, and the fact that we educate somewhere around 37,000 students in Michigan alone…that number is over $100 million in savings, just in the current year.

West Virginia’s teachers’ union is ultimately concerned about the security of public schools from the perspective of government funding. There really is no other argument being made. Yet new opportunities and fresh challenges would serve to strengthen student options, munities and, indeed, be sure to boost educational resources overall.

In announcing the walkout, West Virginia union leader Fred Albert proudly declared, “We are taking action!”— relishing in his union’s resistance to educational opportunity and blind self-protectionism. Now that the strike is over and the status quo of educational mediocrity and conformity has been duly secured, who will rise and “take action” for the students, families, and taxpayers?

Image: Wokandapix (Pixabay License)

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Bishop: ‘Undue burdens’ not required to fight COVID-19
Much of our national debate around the COVID-19 pandemic and the appropriate government response to it has been framed as opposition between those who say they follow “science” and those who do not. This framing is one which is used to devalue and dismiss critics of ever-shifting state responses to the pandemic, as well as to insulate politicians from any sort of accountability for their own prudential judgements. In this context Bishop Thomas Paprocki of Springfield, Illinois, has written a...
Alejandro Chafuen in Forbes: freedom and equality
“Equality” is a term that people uss a lot of nowadays – too much, some would argue. This week in Forbes, the Acton Institute’s managing director, international Alejandro Chafuen writes about equality and its relationship to freedom. Not all agree on which factors of equality are most important – equality of opportunity, e equality, equality before the law, and so on – but however we define it, freedom and equality cannot be separated. Dr. Chafuen’s analysis incorporates much from a...
Acton Line podcast: Supreme Disorder and SCOTUS politics with Ilya Shapiro
The untimely death of Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia in February of 2016 amplified questions about the Supreme Court in the 2016 election to new highs. Republican Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell’s high wire act in denying a hearing and vote on President Barack Obama’s nominee to fill that seat, Judge Merrick Garland, ultimately paid off for him: President Donald Trump nominated Judge Neil Gorsuch, who was then confirmed by the Republican-controlled Senate. A year later, the political world was...
Everything you need to know about Amy Coney Barrett
Amy Coney Barrett’s record of judicial rulings and legal writings shows that she holds an originalist view of the Constitution, and it provides a glimpse into her opinions on such diverse issues as religious liberty, national healthcare, environmental regulations, the right to life, and the Second Amendment. Here are the facts about the woman who could replace replace Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg on the Supreme Court. Biography Amy Coney Barrett was born to Michael and Linda Coney on January 28,...
The right attitude about tithing during COVID-19
COVID-19 has caused thousands to lose their jobs and other regular sources of e. As a result, many have had to cut any extra or unnecessary spending to make ends meet. Some of these “extra costs” included donating money to their local church, house of worship, or favorite charity. Whereas many businesses could generate e by moving online during the pandemic, most churches do not have the luxury of pletely “virtual.” In terms of donations, the faithful could certainly wire...
Everything that’s wrong with Dick Costolo’s tweet in 1,531 characters
Woke capitalism went into overdrive on Wednesday, when a former Twitter CEO seemingly endorsed the full-scale liquidation of entrepreneurs who refuse to bring politics into the workplace. Dick Costolo served as COO of Twitter before ing its CEO from 2010 to 2015. On September 30, he replied to a tweet about woke capitalism from venture capitalist Paul Graham. Graham shared a statement from the cryptocurrency exchange platform Coinbase, which vowed to “create a sense of cohesion and unity” by emphasizing...
The worst moment of the first presidential debate in 2020
The first presidential debate of 2020 reached an historic low in its the very first segment – not from Joe Biden calling the president a “clown” or telling him to “shut up,” nor from Donald Trump choosing to imitate Biden’s interruption-laden 2012 vice presidential debate performance on steroids. The debate descended into disaster when Joe Biden refused to answer whether he would pack the Supreme Court and alter the foundations of American justice. Sadly, most viewers will remember the style...
5 lessons from Donald Trump’s tax returns
A couple making $31,900 who file with the standard deduction would pay $750 in federal e tax. That amount – $750 – is also how much Donald Trump paid in federal taxes in 2016 and 2017. The New York Times released a summary of his tax returns that sheds light on the state of his finances. Most striking is the $750 tax bill, which many find ludicrous on its face. The core of Trump’s strategy to achieve such low taxes...
COVID-19 bailout unleashed a pandemic of fraud
The coronavirus bailout is the largest in U.S. history. While the bill will create a drag on the economy for years, an additional problem is that the massive influx of cash is ripe to e a sheer waste of taxpayer dollars. Fraud was widespread in the COVID-19 Economic Injury Disaster Loans and Paycheck Protection Program grants, and it continues to be a problem for the extra payments within unemployment insurance. Because the bailout is larger than any other in history,...
Amy Coney Barrett: handmaid of the Lord, not the state
In their attempt to forestall the nomination of Amy Coney Barrett to the Supreme Court, a growing number mentators point to her membership in a Christian group that once used the term “handmaid.” This “controversy” shows, among other things, how the works of Margaret Atwood have displaced the traditional Western canon. However, it also adds a thin veneer of respectability over rehashed anti-Catholic prejudice, camouflages anti-Christian bigotry, and conceals a noxious and unconstitutional religious test for office. It takes little...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved