AEA opposes insurance hike, corporal punishment

Sheila Remington is president of Alabama Education Association. CONTRIBUTED
Sheila Remington is president of Alabama Education Association. CONTRIBUTED
MONTGOMERY – Almost 800 members of the Alabama Education Association (AEA) gathered for the annual AEA Delegate Assembly on Dec. 2.
Held at the Renaissance Hotel in Montgomery, the conference served as a time to discuss, debate and set AEA’s 2017 business and legislative agenda. Local educators elect delegates to represent school communities.
Beverly Sims represents Madison City Schools and Madison County Schools (District 3) for AEA. Sims formerly taught at Hazel Green High School.
“AEA represents teachers, post-secondary administrators, students preparing to become educators, retirees and support personnel,” AEA President Sheila Remington told “The Madison Record” in a telephone interview.
In conference business, Sen. Gerald Dial discussed recent increases in the health insurance program for school employees. “The rate increase hurt very much for our bus drivers and cafeteria workers,” Remington said.
For the first time in nine years, Alabama school employees recently received a salary increase. “People were feeling good, but the TRS Board (handling the teacher retirement system and insurance) raised insurance rates,” Remington said.
For some employees, especially bus drivers and cafeteria workers, “the increase took away the raise and left them with less money than before the raise,” Remington said. AEA has filed suit against the board for allegedly violating the open meeting law, she said.
In other business, the delegate assembly passed a resolution to ban corporal punishment, which is a stricter stand for the association.
“This year, we took that position because best practices in education tell us that corporal punishment doesn’t work. Currently, 29 states forbid it, and most systems in Alabama don’t use it,” Remington said.
“There are better ways for classroom discipline than corporal punishment,” she said.
During assemblies, AEA delegates pass resolutions for desired objectives. If the resolution passes for three consecutive years, it becomes a part of AEA’s platform that the organization endorses. One example is AEA’s opposition to the ‘one-time test’ that No Child Left Behind mandated to determine student success.
AEA is closely monitoring the Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA). “The new, national law for education is really changing things. in the past, everything was top heavy with federal regulations. ESSA … involves community members, employees and students for local control,” she said.
For example, “Madison may need something totally different from Tuscaloosa,” Remington said.
For more information, visit alaedu.org.

Digital Version

Digital version of The Madison Record – April 24, 2024

Madison

I-565 nighttime detours planned for Exit 10 work in Madison

Madison

Liberty Middle School student passes away after medical emergency on campus

Huntsville

Lexi Regensburger promotes HEALS for Girl Scout Gold

Harvest

Rocket City Novas, a new dance krewe, sashay into town

Harvest

Asbury Car & Bike Show to feature vehicles in pristine condition

Liberty Middle School

Liberty takes first-place finish in State MathCounts

Harvest

Fantasy Playhouse to launch ‘Space Monkeys!’ on May 9-12

Harvest

Defense Innovation Summit to explore tech in national security

Madison

‘Sounds of Summer’ concerts return to Home Place Park

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

Mustang Mud Run- “Mud Head To Toe”

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

Mattress Sale To Aid James Clemens Football Program

Bob Jones High School

Madison Visionary Partners awards 5 Community Impact Grants

James Clemens High School

Students Neyan Sezhian, Erik Wu originate James Clemens Math Tournament

Bob Jones High School

Bob Jones bests rival James Clemens in Game 1 of weekend series

Digital Version

Digital version of The Madison Record – April 17, 2024

Events

Check out the 2024-25 edition of “Explore Huntsville-Madison”

Bob Jones High School

Business, Army groups offer scholarships

Bob Jones High School

Optimists award teacher grants, essay winners

Liberty Middle School

Kristen Brown named finalist for Alabama Teacher of the Year

Madison

Journey Math Team makes mark in 2 tourneys

Bob Jones High School

Artwork by Charity Stratton on exhibit at library

Harvest

Madison City Community Orchestra to present ‘Eroica’ on April 20-21

Events

Orion Amphitheater kicks off its third concert season tonight

x