Jul 22, 2020 | Press
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
July 21, 2020
CEA Says Nearly 80% of Members Polled Willing to Refuse to Return to Work over Safety Concerns
DENVER –
The Colorado Education Association (CEA) today delivered a petition to Gov. Polis and Colorado Commissioner of Education Katy Anthes, Ph.D., outlining the four expectations that must be met to ensure the safe return to school in the fall. The petition, signed by 13,457 educators, parents and community members, demands educator voice, safety protections, transparency and equity be included in districts’ return to school plans.
“We’ve been clear with our demands to ensure the safety and well-being of students and educators during an eventual return to in-person instruction,” said Amie Baca-Oehlert, a high school counselor and President of CEA.“Educators should be involved not only in the creation and implementation of district plans, but also have the opportunity to vote on those plans.
“In addition to providing personal protective equipment and making sure health protocols are in place, disease data must be made available to all families, staff and community members immediately and consistently,” continued Baca-Oehlert.“And students, staff and families must be provided with equitable access to education, including ensuring school districts have a plan to reach out to our most vulnerable students to ensure their academic needs are being met regardless of where the learning occurs.”
Colorado’s local control public school system results in 178 separate school districts, each making its own individual plans for a return to school in the fall. Currently, there are significant variations among the state’s districts and their return to school plans.
“What we need right now are requirements, not recommendations. The governor, department of education, superintendents and school boards are positioned to guide and provide consistency to school districts to ensure the health and safety of the state’s nearly 914,000 students and more than 55,000 educators,” added Baca-Oehlert.
CEA also made available the results of a member survey conducted last week and completed by nearly 10,000 educators. Seventy-eight percent of respondents indicated they would be willing to join their colleagues in refusing to return to work if health and safety concerns were not addressed and protective measures not implemented.
Other highlights of the survey:
- 95% of respondents say educators should vote on districts’ return to school plans
- 53% want to start the school year 100% remote
- 8% want to start the school year 100% in person
- Fewer than 1/5 of respondents believe districts can keep them safe
“No one wants to return to schools and classrooms more than educators, but the decision to do so must take into account guidance from the state and local health departments as well as the necessary safety precautions,” said John Robinson, a 20-year high school teacher and president of the Poudre Education Association.“If school districts aren’t able to guarantee the health and safety of their students and educators, then we must delay the return to school and continue with distance learning.”
To download the member survey results, visit https://bit.ly/ceabacktoworkreport.
The petition language that was delivered to Gov. Polis and CO Commissioner of Education Katy Anthes Ph.D, and signed by 13,475 is as follows:
‚ÄãThe Colorado Education Association believes that in-person learning is essential for students and educators and looks forward to returning to school in person this fall as long as districts ensure that the safety and health of all stakeholders are in place.
To ensure our schools are safe to learn this fall, the following expectations must be met:
- Employees voice and safety must drive decision making through honoring bargaining rights or a vote of approval from all employees.
- Safety protections, protocols, and precautions must be provided by our school districts for all students and staff.
- Our community must be provided with transparency and data that has driven the decision making process.
- Equity for students, staff, and families must always be provided, no matter where the learning is occurring.
Signed,
Our Colorado Community
Jul 21, 2020 | Blog
Dear educators, support professionals, parents, and community members,
Today we stood up for the schools Colorado students deserve this fall by delivering a petition to Governor Jared Polis and Colorado Commissioner of Education Katy Anthes, Ph.D, raising the voices of over 13,000 educators, parents, education support professionals, and community members. Together, we demanded school employees’ voices be at the center of the reopening discussions, and safety protocols be provided by our school districts to ensure all students and staff remain healthy. Our expectations that must be met before schools reopen are:
- Decisions must involve employee voices. As part of the return to school planning, educators need to be part of the local decision-making about what safety protocols are necessary for schools to re-open. Educators must have the opportunity to vote to either approve or reject return to school plans.
- Safety protocols and protections must be provided. PPE and health protocols must be in place for students and staff. While some districts have announced protocols that will require temperatures to be checked and masks to be worn, others are requiring much less. Masks MUST be required. If a local health department is requiring masks in public places, school districts should be required to do the same.
- Transparency. Disease data must be available to all families, staff and community members immediately and consistently. Colorado’s open meetings laws must be followed so that the public can participate in the decision making process.
- Equity. Students, staff and families must always be provided with equitable access to education and tools, no matter where the learning occurs.
We know this is just one step in ensuring schools are safe to reopen this fall and it will take all of us, collectively, taking action to ensure our students have the resources and learning environments they need to be healthy and successful. Are you ready to take action? Sign up here and we will let your local know you are ready to demand the schools our students deserve.
Dear Gov. Polis and Commissioner Anthes:
I write to you on behalf of the 39,000 members of the Colorado Education Association and the students we serve regarding the pending reopening of schools across the state. We appreciate your leadership during this extraordinarily difficult time through which we are all living.
The purpose of this letter is to accompany the petition that was signed by more than 13,000 parents, educators and community members and delivered to you earlier today,expressing our concerns about the decisions that are being made without our input to reopen schools in just a few weeks. Many of our local presidents will also be sharing the petition with local school board members and superintendents. Specifically, we are asking that guidance from the state to local school districts include:
- The four expectations outlined in our petition and defined below are met prior to reopening schools to in person learning.
- Employee voice;
- Proper safety precautions;
- Transparency; and
- Equity.
- A super majority of employees in a school district vote to approve the district’s restart plan prior to returning to in person learning.
While educators want nothing more than to safely return to our classrooms and the in-person instruction we all know is irreplaceable to our students, employee voice, proper safety precautions, transparency and equity must be at the center of the decision-making process – not political, economic or corporate interests.
More than 9,800 educators across 122 school districts in Colorado have shared with us their concerns about school and workplace safety during the COVID-19 pandemic. Across the state, educators want a democratic voice in their workplace safety plans. They are willing to join their colleagues in refusing to return to work until the four conditions outlined above are met in order to ensure the safety and health of students and educators.
For years, our chronically underfunded public education system has served as the primary way to balance the state budget. The economic impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic exacerbated an already dire situation with our students and public education in Colorado facing a $1.18 billion shortfall next year. As a result, many local districts and communities don’t have the necessary resources or capacity to maintain even the most basic preventative measures of a minimum of six feet for physical distancing, much less the other important preventative actions such as personal protective equipment (PPE), testing and tracing and adequate ventilation and cleaning supplies. If we cannot properly fund our schools in normal times, how will we fund these additional needs?
Educators’ number one priority right now is the same as it has always been: ensuring the physical safety, mental health and overall well-being of our students. Far too many lives are at stake for plans that do not promise the safety of the entire community.
The petition you received today outlines our four expectations that must be met to ensure the health and safety of all students and staff:
- Decisions must involve employee voices. As part of the return to school planning, educators need to be part of the local decision-making about what safety protocols are necessary for schools to re-open. Educators must have the opportunity to vote to either approve or reject return to school plans.
- Safety protocols and protections must be provided. PPE and health protocols must be in place for students and staff. While some districts have announced protocols that will require temperatures to be checked and masks to be worn, others are requiring much less. Masks MUST be required. If a local health department is requiring masks in public places, school districts should be required to do the same.
- Transparency. Disease data must be available to all families, staff and community members immediately and consistently. Colorado’s open meetings laws must be followed so that the public can participate in the decision making process.
- Equity. Students, staff and families must always be provided with equitable access to education and tools, no matter where the learning occurs.
We cannot allow the reopening of schools to be merely a political or economic decision; doing so ignores the voices of education experts – educators and education support professionals. If we cannot ensure that the expectations above are met, we must continue with remote learning protocols. We call on the state to shift its focus toward ensuring that our communities and parents can support a robust remote learning program. The state should provide the structures and safety net to support families in a remote learning environment, including: continuing to provide protection against eviction; extending unemployment benefits, including for those in the gig economy; requiring businesses to provide accommodations for working parents and directing school districts to use their time and resources to ensure that online learning can be provided equitably; and supporting school districts to have a plan to reach out to our most vulnerable students to ensure their academic needs are being met.
We need safe, equitable and well-funded public schools ‚Äì this is what Colorado’s students deserve.
Sincerely,
Amie Baca-Oehlert
High School Counselor and CEA President

Jul 8, 2020 | Press
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
July 8, 2020
Association Says Certain Expectations Must be Met to Ensure Safety of All Students, Staff
DENVER – The Colorado Education Association (CEA) and its more than 39,000 members, in response to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, are calling on all school districts across the state to involve educators when planning for the safe return to in-person classroom teaching for the upcoming 2020-21 academic school year.
“Educators want nothing more than to return to their schools and classrooms, knowing in-person instruction is preferred, but it must be done in a thoughtful, safe and responsible way, taking into account not only the recommendations and guidelines of public health officials, but also the voices of parents, students and educators,” said Amie Baca-Oehlert, a high school counselor and president of CEA.
Complicating the issue is the state’s system of local control. Unlike most states in which the public school system is administered by the state, public schools in Colorado fall under the control of local school districts, resulting in 178 separate districts each making their own decisions as to whether or not a physical return to school in the fall is plausible and what the conditions will be if and when students and educators do return.
There are a number of significant variables among Colorado districts’ plans for a return to school in the fall, including but not limited to whether temperature checks and mask wearing will be mandatory or not.
To ensure consistency and the health and safety of the state’s nearly 914,000 students and more than 55,000 educators during a return to in-person instruction this fall, CEA and its members’ are asking to be included in the decision-making process. The expectations include:
- Involving employee voices. Districts and educators should bargain the necessary conditions to return to school and confirm with a vote of approval by all employees.
- Safety protocols and protections must be provided. PPE and health protocols must be in place for students and staff.
- Transparency. Disease data must be available to all families, staff and community members immediately and consistently.
- Equity for all. Students, staff and families must always be provided with equitable access to education and tools, no matter where the learning occurs.
“There are countless justifiable reasons that students should return to the classroom in the fall,” added Baca-Oehlert.“In addition to their academic and social-emotional development, and physical and mental health needs, many students depend on school for their daily meals. Parents and family members rely on schools for economic reasons, allowing them to return to work.
“But those reasons alone don’t dismiss educators’ valid fears and concerns and the risk of being exposed to the virus, especially as we see cases spiking in parts across the country.”
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Jul 8, 2020 | Legal Update
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Jul 1, 2020 | Legal Update
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