Puerto Rican teachers protest closures in face of violence

May 24, 2018
Issue 
Teachers protest against education reforms, in San Juan in march.

Large-scale teacher-led rebellions against cuts and for workers’ rights have broken out in US states such as West Virginia, Arizona, Oklahoma and Colorado. Although it has received less publicity, teachers are also rebelling in the US’s Caribbean colony of Puerto Rico.

Fighting to keep the island’s public schools open in the wake of the devastation caused by Hurricane Maria last year, teachers are boycotting standardised tests and even teaming up with parents to occupy their schools.

The cut-backs and anti-worker attacks kicked off well before the hurricane. An act of US Congress in 2016 handed dictatorial powers over Puerto Rico to an unelected Fiscal Oversight and Management Board in the name of debt restructuring.

But the crisis has intensified in the aftermath of the storm, as the government moves to privatise schools and the electric power authority.

In February, Labor Notes’ Meghan Brophy spoke with Mercedes Martinez, president of the Puerto Rican Teachers Federation (FMPR), about how privatisers are taking advantage of the disaster and how educators are fighting back.

Since then, while teacher strikes spread on the mainland, teachers in Puerto Rico have also ramped up their struggle and faced heightened repression. Police brutally attacked demonstrators on May 1. To update us on this fast-developing story, Labor Notes’ Jonah Furman spoke with Martinez on May 4. The combined interviews appear below.

***

How are teachers organising now?

We are going to schools that are facing shutdown to start a boycott against standardised testing, in order to pressure the government to keep those schools open.

First, they said 305 schools were to be closed, then they lowered that to 283, now it’s 266. There are 1100 schools on the whole island. They want to shut down almost a third of the schools.

On April 20, there was a huge rally in front of parliament from all the schools that are targeted. Parents and teachers wanted to deliver a resolution, but police blocked the entrances, even though it’s a public building. So we did an act of civil disobedience.

Finally the deputies came out and took the resolution. We went to the governor’s mansion too and presented him [with] the teachers’ plan. They can’t claim we didn’t go through the correct channels.

They want to convert 10% of the schools to charters in August. They will base those decisions on the standardised testing.

We are focusing on the shutdown targets to boycott standardised tests. No testing, no scores, no information, no charter.

Schools have started occupations. In one school, children haven’t gone to school for two weeks; they’re demanding to speak to the Department of Education. One school has been occupied for three weeks already. More are joining or voting to join [as of May 4].

Parents and teachers and community leaders, everybody has joined together. But most of all, mothers.

What happened on May Day?

It was amazing. More than 50,000 people came together at the “Golden Mile,” where all the banks and the Oversight Board office are.

Unions, environmentalists, feminists, teachers, road workers, religious people, and professors marched together against the policies of the Board.

Energy workers were chanting against the privatisation of their services. Private sector employees were fighting against the labour reforms the Fiscal Board wants to implement.

Elderly people were fighting against 25% cuts to their pensions. Mothers and parents were there to keep the schools open. Environmentalists were protesting new laws that let developers build whatever they want, wherever they want.

It was massive. It was a show of force to the government, a show of the feelings of the people.

At the same time, it was brutal. The police brutality was overwhelming. They tried to stop the march at different points. They teargassed thousands of people.

The protesters and the police agreed that if nothing happened for 15 minutes, police would let protesters go. Ten minutes passed, and the police started teargassing. They pushed people down, including children. They chased our students to their homes and arrested 22 of them. It was awful. Reporters were attacked by the police, on purpose.

It was all premeditated. They thought they were going to get people to back down. Instead, they just made people angrier.

On May 2, a political group organised a march in the tourist area against the Board and police brutality, requesting that the head of the police department be laid off. They wanted to show the world we are not going to back down.

Can you give some background about what was going on in Puerto Rico before the hurricane?

Well, the seven members from the PROMESA Financial Oversight and Management Board are like seven dictators. The first thing they did when they were appointed was announce budget cuts to different agencies.

They also approved what they called “labour reform”, which involved the firing of many workers and the elimination of paid sick leave and overtime pay for private sector workers if they work longer than eight hours. Companies fired and rehired the same employees with lesser benefits and basic rights.

We have faced attacks against our education system for many years. They want to divert public funds to private schools. We were able to stop the bill at first, but now we are facing the same attack again. They want to fire thousands of teachers, close hundreds of schools, create a voucher program, and privatise the schools.

What has it been like to live and work in Puerto Rico in the aftermath of Hurricane Maria?

We are living what [Canadian writer and activist] Naomi Klein calls disaster capitalism. Many people still don’t have electricity or water. Batteries are being stolen out of generators.

People are tired and vulnerable — and the ruling class is taking advantage of this disaster to advance a corporate reform agenda. For all the public sector workers in our country, including in education, organising now is very hard.

The Secretary of Education tried to shut down more schools after the hurricane, but our communities fought back and won. Teachers worked to fix up many of the schools even though the government didn’t want to reopen them.

We had to protest with the communities, requesting that children be able to go back to school. She shut down 50 schools during the hurricane, and we were able to stop the closings of 30 of them.

What has been the role of Puerto Rican unions in the hurricane recovery?

There is devastation everywhere, and all the public unions have been working together to fix and restore our country. The electrical union is working very hard to restore power even though the government is neglecting to give them enough equipment. They are also trying to inform the public that privatisation is not the answer.

Because the privatisation attempts are attacks against the whole working class, we can’t just give individual responses. We are joining forces — public sector unions, private sector unions, community groups, and more — and meeting on a weekly basis, working together to fight back.

What is happening with the privatisation of the electric company? What is the response of unions?

Four hundred thousand households still remain without power. That’s 1 million to 1.5 million people [as of February]. The union is working long hours every day to restore electricity, but they don’t have enough people to restore services so fast.

We have 1700 electrical workers from the US who have come here to help — but it’s a shame that the US did not allow workers from Cuba and Venezuela to come and help too.

The union is exposing the lack of equipment and what the government is trying to do. I think they’re scared to go on strike right now because of what has happened to the people of our country.

It’s tough, since so many people are still without electricity. They are doing everything in their power to let people know what privatisation will look like and all the rights they will lose.

A slew of education “reform” proposals was just announced. What are teachers, parents and students doing to keep schools open?

We are preparing for a fight, informing people about the need to go on strike until the government gets rid of that bill. We are having several workshops each day to inform the parents and communities about the stakes. Teachers have gone on strike before, against the charters and attempts at privatisation. We did what we had to do and they weren’t able to approve the bill. Now we are here again in the same position.

What can union activists elsewhere do to support our brothers and sisters in Puerto Rico?

Solidarity has been displayed by unions in the US already. Nurses, doctors, and social workers have come to our schools to help children who have no medical insurance and to tend to people who are at home.

The Movement of Rank-and-File Educators caucus from the New York City teachers union has been very active. They have sent us a lot of donations. They have been helping explain in the US about what’s happening in Puerto Rico — and we have been doing the same by asking how we can help the fight in New York.

A lot of people have been sending us letters, calling representatives in the Senate, and starting petitions to spread the word about how the government wants to take advantage of this disaster. We started a GoFundMe since we are a small union with 3500 members and we need money to fight back.

We demand that the Financial Oversight and Management Board leave our country and we want the [US]$72 billion debt to be abolished. I know there are also many attacks on public education in the US. We need to connect these struggles.

[Slightly abridged from .]

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