203:, many NEA members began to push for the association to act more like a union. In 1961, about 200 of the NEA's largest urban locals formed the National Council of Urban Education Associations to push the national organization toward collective bargaining. The caucus was successful: The same year, the NEA Representative Assembly (RA) passed a resolution establishing the "Urban Project", adopting a policy of "professional negotiations" akin to collective bargaining, and requiring the NEA to provide staff, research and financial assistance to locals involved in "professional negotiations". By 1965, the NEA was providing nearly $ 885,000 a year to locals in support of "professional negotiations", up from a mere $ 28,000 in 1961. In 1962, pro-unionization forces in the NEA pushed to remove the organization's prohibition against strikes. They were unsuccessful, but did win approval of a "sanctions" policy. "Sanctions" included waging a
298:. But most teachers felt the increases were not enough, and a special convention of the FEA voted against accepting the package. In February 1968, FEA president Jane Arnold said the state association would support local teachers if they walked off the job. Thousands did. Schools closed in roughly two-thirds of Florida's counties. At the height of the strike, 25,712 teachers—about 40 percent of the state's teachers—walked out. The statewide Florida teachers' strike was not uniform, however. Strikes lasted only a few days in some districts, while in others teachers walked picket lines for weeks. In Pinellas County, teachers stayed out for six weeks. Small groups of teachers struck for as long as three months. Arnold and other FEA leaders were threatened with arrest. Tornillo was fined $ 30,000 and given two-year jail term (which, after appeal, he was not forced to serve).
168:. However, membership remained low and varied widely from district to district, even though dues were not high. FEA, like much of the NEA at the time, was dominated by administrators rather than rank-and-file teachers. The administrators' influence often kept FEA from being an effective advocate for classroom teachers. But in larger school districts, the FEA was somewhat successful in obtaining occasional salary increases, improvements to facilities, and curriculum changes. However the FEA in its early years was seen more as a proponent of white teachers specifically. They opposed the efforts of African-American teachers to sue for salary equalization in the 1940s, with their frequent petitions of interventions designed to delay the outcomes of many cases that eventually prevented schools from maintaining separate unequal salary schedule for white and black teachers.
479:
unions have done much to protect under-performing teachers from being fired. These critics say the association is increasingly frozen out of politics in a state where
Republicans control both the executive and legislative branches of government, and has made little headway in convincing the public that the candidates it backs are worth electing or the policies it supports are worth enacting. FEA supporters counter that the federation has proven effective despite these odds, and remains a force in state politics. They point to the federation's king-making role in the state's 2002 Democratic gubernatorial primary, where the union's candidate (
364:
union in the state, and he was the leader of the militant faction within FEA. But
Tornillo's views only worsened the friction between the NEA and AFT in the state. By the end of the year, DCCTA had merged with the AFT affiliate in Dade County and was calling itself the "United Teachers of Dade" (UTD), and Tornillo had convinced education associations representing other large urban school districts in Florida to join the AFT. With more than half of FEA's convention delegates now belonging to the AFT, a statewide merger was inevitable. FEA changed its name to FEA-United and affiliated with the
305:, and local businesses paid their employees to teach classes. Public support for the teachers, weak at the beginning of the strike, shrunk dramatically after the first several weeks. "'We thought they would be with us,' Arnold said. 'We thought it would unite the community and the teachers. It did a little bit of the opposite. ... A lot of teachers lost their innocence. They thought the community liked them.'" Local education associations began to negotiate their own settlements, often agreeing not to challenge school districts for terminating the most militant teachers.
1228:
348:(July 9, 1969), that both the old and new Florida constitutions gave all employees—whether employed in the public or private sector—the right to bargain collectively. The court did not hold that public employees had the right to strike or that the state had a duty bargain with its employees or their organization, but the mere affirmation of public-sector collective bargaining rights was a major victory for FEA.
425:, representing university faculty on all campuses of Florida's State University System, as well as a number of community college faculties, switched affiliation from FEA/United to FTP-NEA. In addition, in 1985 the FEA/United affiliate in Charlotte County was defeated by the two new FTP-NEA affiliates and lost the right to represent teachers and support personnel. In 1998, the
503:, local embezzled $ 66,000. In July of the same year, long-time Broward Teachers Union president Tony Gentile was arrested during an Internet sting operation. In a settlement package, the local union paid him for unused sick and vacation time and a retirement contribution valued at $ 120,000. In February 2003, $ 40,000 was embezzled from the
360:
had begun establishing local affiliates in the state shortly thereafter. The AFT convinced FEA president-elect Louise Alford to leave FEA and work for the AFT, and later persuaded
Richard Batchelder (a former president of the NEA) to do the same. Soon the AFT had a number of large, militant locals in the state.
452:
With raiding no longer causing tensions between FTP-NEA and FEA-United, a merger was quickly agreed to. FTP-NEA's Board of
Directors signed off on the terms of a merger in April 1998, with FEA-United following suit in June. Members of each organization approved the merger in April and May 1999, and a
420:
But there were losses on both sides as well. In 1980, the
Hillsborough Classroom Teachers Association, the Collier County Education Association, and the Hendry County Education Association disaffiliated from FEA-United over Tornillo's increasingly dictatorial approach to running the state union, and
432:
But despite the conflict, the two unions remained remarkably evenly matched. By 1987, FTP-NEA's membership had risen to about 37,000 members, while FEA-United's membership stood at about 30,000 members. By 2000, when the two unions merged, FTP-NEA membership had risen to 60,000 while FEA-United had
207:
campaign against the school district, encouraging teachers to not accept teaching positions with the school system, refusing to provide unpaid services (such as tutoring or supervision of clubs), and political action to defeat anti-union politicians. "Sanctions" could be employed against any school
478:
However, some observers claim the merger has not had positive results. Critics argue that local FEA unions are less effective in collective bargaining, local and state annual dues are too high, young teachers are reluctant to join their local affiliates, and neither the state association nor local
441:
By 1990, FEA-United and FTP-NEA were talking merger. Despite 15 years of competition, neither union had achieved an overwhelming majority among the state's teachers. Worse, the problems confronting the state's schools had not improved much since the mid-1970s. With state politics trending more and
359:
The external pressure came from the
American Federation of Teachers. FEA had spent nearly $ 1 million supporting local associations in the 1968 strike, leaving it financially weakened. The strike had drawn the AFT's attention, and—sensing that teachers in Florida were ripe for organizing—the union
245:
FEA began to lobby the state for more funding for public schools. State legislative action had often been the only way for NEA locals to win better pay and working conditions prior to the enactment of the professional negotiations policy, so FEA was no newcomer to politics. The association lobbied
215:
school system to open negotiations with the DCCTA. Although the national NEA was obligated to provide assistance, the FEA was not and refused to become involved in
Tornillo's campaign for professional negotiations. The DCCTA won a contract, but FEA's reluctance to support the local association led
470:
Since the merger in 2000, FEA has been involved in a number of political battles. Florida's governor's office and state legislature have been dominated by
Republicans, who have proven legislatively active and willing to experiment with a number of new educational policies. FEA, traditionally much
384:
Tornillo quickly came to control FEA-United. Although he was not elected president of the federation until 1978, a position he held until 2000, he was the dominant force within the new AFT state federation. In 1981, he was elected a vice president of the AFT and sat on the AFT executive council's
363:
In 1974, the DCCTA disaffiliated from FEA and formed a new statewide teachers' federation, FEA-United. Tornillo began arguing that NEA and AFT should merge in the state of
Florida to give educators more power. Tornillo's views carried a great deal of weight because DCCTA was the largest teachers'
233:
Prodded by the DCCTA, the NEA undertook a study of the condition of
Florida's public schools. The study, released in 1966, concluded that school funding had actually fallen while enrollment—and the need for more teachers, buildings, and supplies—had soared. Teachers were underpaid, benefits were
335:
right to bargain collectively. In 1968, two newly employed teachers and the Dade County Education Association, Local 1875, AFT, sued the Board of Public Instruction of Dade County and DCCTA. In an ironic twist, AFT argued that the school board's collective bargaining relationship with DCCTA was
404:
the FTP-NEA's large Broward association, the Classroom Teachers Association (CTA). The AFT had forced an election for a new bargaining representative three times between 1975 and 1979 but had failed to win the elections. After the 1983 victory, Tony Gentile, a veteran AFT activist who had been
549:
Teachers United and part of the team which negotiated the FTP-NEA/FEA-United merger in 2000. He had also been elected the statewide federation's First Vice President in 2000. Ford has focused FEA's energies on internal organizing, grass-roots political mobilization, building stronger and more
380:
Despite the fragmentation of the FEA, teachers in Florida still were able to achieve a major collective bargaining victory. The militancy of the teachers' unions in Florida, combined with continuing concern over the 1968 strike, prompted the Florida state legislature in 1974 to enact a public
416:
also voted to join FEA-United. In fact, during the 1980s both state unions put a high priority on organizing education support professionals across the state. It was during this period that the character of the two organizations changed from being unions that only represented teachers, to
515:
the headquarters of the United Teachers of Dade after receiving a tip that president Pat Tornillo had embezzled or misspent millions of dollars in union dues. Critics and supporters worry that the scandals are symbolic of deeper organizational and financial control problems within FEA.
340:. The AFT's strategy was to break DCCTA's collective bargaining relationship, then organize the teachers in Dade County itself. But after the lawsuit had been filed, Florida voters in November 1968 approved a new state constitution. In mid-1969, the Florida Supreme Court held in
528:
law, and beat back a 2002 state attempt to give local school districts the right to privatize public school workers such as bus drivers, cafeteria workers, aides and others. In 2002, the union also successfully organized the full-time professors, counselors and librarians at
541:
Dinnen retired as FEA president in 2003. She then ran for and won a seat on the Broward County school board. During her tenure as President of the Association she presided over the selection in 2000 of former FTP-NEA President Aaron Wallace as the FEA Chief of Staff.
748:
In 1959, Batchelder had been elected president of NEA's Department of Classroom Teachers, the largest department within the organization, and served as an NEA vice president from 1964 to 1965. During his term as NEA president, he had overseen the merger with the
553:
Andrew Spar is the current FEA president. He was formerly the vice president of FEA and took on this position in September 2020 after succeeding former president Fedrick Ingram, who was elected secretary-treasurer of the American Federation of Teachers.
471:
more prone to lean Democratic, has engaged in draining and lengthy battles over school vouchers, teacher tenure, merit pay, bonus pay, bans and limitations on the collection of teacher union dues, the teaching of creationism, student testing,
388:
Under Tornillo, FEA-United proved to be very influential within the Florida AFL–CIO. A quarter of the AFL–CIO's state membership belonged to FEA-United, and the union began exercising its political muscle. In 1993, FEA-United, working with
929:
Tornillo was eventually convicted, forced to sell most of his homes, and reimburse his local union. He is now serving a prison term. The financial problems stemming from his actions nearly bankrupted UTD. Bell, "Union Chief Faces Battle",
371:
But half of the original FEA affiliates refused to merge. The NEA established a new state organization, the Florida Teaching Profession-National Education Association (FTP-NEA), and roughly half the FEA's original members joined it.
885:
members. But only about half of them actually belonged to FEA unions and paid dues. Still 120,000 members represented about 60 percent of the state's educational workforce. Berry, "Teacher Unions Want to Join Forces",
328:(September 18, 1968), that state law did not prohibit public employees (such as teachers) from bargaining collectively. However, the court also said that public employees did not have the right to strike.
26:
453:
founding convention was held in June 2000. The combined federation, now calling itself by its original name, represented about 240,000 members and was the largest labor organization in the state.
429:
Classified/Teachers Association—FEA-United's fourth-largest affiliate—voted to become independent as well, arguing that FEA-United had not done enough to service the local's contract.
405:
president since 1979, became the new bargaining agent for Broward's teachers. In 1990, the AFT also successfully raided the Volusia Education Association, another large FTP-NEA local.
757:
in 1969. Batchelder later became executive director of FEA-United and an AFT vice president. Batchelder eventually went on to become vice president of the Florida AFL–CIO. Selden,
393:, unseated 16-year incumbent state AFL–CIO president Danny Miller. With FEA-United's support, the post was won by Marilyn Lenard, president of the Space Coast Labor Council and a
301:
In the end the strike was not successful. Gov. Kirk and the legislature refused to appropriate more money or raise taxes further. School districts hired substitute teachers as
287:
drew 30,000 teachers. Even though public employee strikes are illegal in Florida, FEA leaders began talking up a statewide strike. In September 1967, most of the teachers in
408:
In addition to raiding, both organizations also organized new members. For example, in 1990 FEA-United successfully organized a unit of about 450 blue-collar workers in the
184:
school system, ran for the presidency of the Dade County Classroom Teachers Association (DCCTA). Tornillo won office by calling for greater organizational militancy and the
390:
422:
421:
became independent unions. Four years later all three locals chose to become affiliates of the Florida Teaching Profession-National Education Association. In 1982 the
208:
district which, in the opinion of the local association, had engaged in "unethical or arbitrary" policies or which had refused "sound professional practices".
442:
more conservative, both unions felt merger would be advantageous. But continuing conflict between the two unions kept merger talks from progressing very far.
1274:
294:
Despite government action, the teachers struck again. Gov. Kirk called a special session of the legislature in January 1968, which led to higher sales and
313:
Although the 1968 strike did not achieve the goals the FEA had set, FEA members were radicalized by the strike and the association won other victories.
279:
Outraged by the veto, Florida teachers went on a statewide strike—the first statewide teachers' strike in American history. An August 1967 rally at the
454:
291:
and Broward counties resigned in protest, forcing schools to close. A court ordered the teachers back into the classroom, but hundreds stayed out.
449:. The unions encouraged each state to also sign no-raid and jurisdictional agreements, and both teachers' federations in Florida quickly did so.
177:
587:
225:
563:
457:, a Broward County community college professor, was elected president. She subsequently won election as an AFT vice president as well.
1269:
530:
1254:
157:
rather than a labor union, and membership was initially limited to white teachers and administrators only. FEA worked to persuade
1264:
1249:
185:
1184:
1142:
394:
356:
External and internal pressures caused two organizational splits in the Florida Education Association in the 1970s.
161:
and the public to increase funding for schools, end discrimination against married female schoolteachers, and more.
1279:
607:
In search of democracy : the NAACP writings of James Weldon Johnson, Walter White, and Roy Wilkins (1920–1977)
261:
251:
199:
as unprofessional. But after the AFT won collective bargaining rights for teachers in New York City and formed the
1259:
508:
127:
80:
230:
The DCCTA's actions set in motion a series of events which led to a statewide Florida teachers' strike in 1968.
191:
Tornillo's election was indicative of a wave of militancy in the NEA. Since its inception, the NEA had rejected
131:
84:
750:
200:
1209:
280:
239:
1077:
Marks, Marilyn. "Unions Target Florida; Jobs Difficult to Organize, But Labor Leaders Sense Opportunity".
675:
583:
504:
868:
Riechmann, "Two National Teacher Unions Agree Not to Steal Members", Associated Press, July 2, 1996.
480:
426:
409:
288:
145:
in 1968, the FEA split into two separate federations in 1974. The two groups merged again in 2000.
246:
for a minimum teacher salary of $ 5,000 a year and a more equitable means of funding schools than
1233:
1084:
McGuire, Raymond. "Public Employee Collective Bargaining in Florida – Past, Present and Future".
500:
235:
445:
The conditions for merger improved in the mid-1990s. In 1996, the national NEA and AFT signed a
400:
However, conflict between FEA-United and FTP-NEA continued. In March 1983, the AFT successfully
234:
poor, and school facilities in bad shape. The report electrified teachers in Florida, and Dade,
153:
The Florida Education Association was established in 1886 as an affiliate of the NEA. It was an
472:
499:
FEA has seen a number of scandals since the merger as well. In March 2001, a secretary in the
302:
126:. Its 145,000 members make it the largest union in the state. It is a merged affiliate of the
546:
317:
211:
Tornillo eagerly embraced professional negotiations and sanctions, and in 1966 he forced the
192:
154:
649:
550:
effective locals, and offering union-provided professional development to all FEA members.
212:
181:
44:
8:
647:, September 19, 1996; Rado, "For Florida Schools, 'Mr. T' is King of Blackboard Jungle",
365:
265:
920:
Farrington, "Teachers Union a Factor in Florida", Associated Press, September 25, 2002.
721:
The teachers resigned in order to avoid the legal penalties which accompanied a strike.
413:
257:
25:
524:
FEA has also had a number of successes. The union successfully challenged the state's
1180:
1138:
878:
525:
894:, May 21, 1999; Kleindienst, "Merged Teacher Union Is Poised for Education Battle",
631:
284:
216:
Tornillo and other leaders to lobby the state association to become more militant.
204:
141:
The FEA was founded in 1886. After leading the nation's first statewide teachers'
1213:
1000:
Dukess, Karen. "Teachers Association Considers Affiliation With National Group".
643:
592:
254:
165:
582:
The claim of first statewide teachers' strike in the U.S. is also made by the
1243:
345:
325:
322:
Pinellas County Classroom Teachers Association v. Board of Public Instruction
196:
142:
890:, June 6, 1998; Talalay and Kleindienst, "Unions Seek Strength in Numbers",
1056:
Kleindienst, Linda. "Merged Teacher Union Is Poised for Education Battle".
708:, March 16, 1992; Thomas, "25 Years After Strike, Schools Still at Issue",
637:
337:
247:
158:
1154:
Talalay, Sarah and Kleindienst, Linda. "Unions Seek Strength in Numbers".
1126:
Riechmann, Deb. "Two National Teacher Unions Agree Not to Steal Members".
1119:
Rado, Diane. "For Florida Schools, 'Mr. T' is King of Blackboard Jungle".
839:
Dukess, "Teachers Association Considers Affiliation With National Group",
753:. Batchelder played a key role in the merger of the AFT and NEA locals in
545:
Andy Ford was elected her successor. Ford was previously the president of
754:
512:
273:
135:
119:
88:
381:
employee collective bargaining law. Pat Tornillo helped draft the bill.
1091:
Mitchell, Tia. "FCCJ Begins Contract Talks With Educators, New Union".
487:) and ran a strong campaign against a popular, wealthy incumbent (Gov.
484:
446:
401:
907:
Hegarty and Gilmer, "Once Mighty Teacher's Union Influence on Wane",
269:
488:
1049:
Hopkins, John. "A Review of Events in Professional Negotiations".
955:
Mitchell, "FCCJ Begins Contract Talks With Educators, New Union",
331:
A year later, the Florida Supreme Court ruled that teachers had a
938:, March 29, 2001; Hirschman, "Teachers Union President Resigns",
295:
123:
1206:
1177:
The National Education Association: The Power Base for Education
1168:
Thomas, Kevin. "25 Years After Strike, Schools Still at Issue".
1147:
Sutton, Charlotte. "Two Teachers Unions Moving Toward Merger".
1014:
Farrell, Jodi Mailander. "1968 Strike a Landmark for Schools".
934:, May 19, 2003; Eckhart, "Lawsuit Accuses Ex-Worker of Theft",
704:, February 2, 1998; Fish, "School Crisis Echoes '67 Deadlock",
176:
The modern era of the FEA can be traced to 1963. In that year,
1227:
118:) is a statewide federation of teacher and education workers'
662:
Hopkins, "A Review of Events in Professional Negotiations",
1063:
Lamee, Pat. "Schools, Union Start Talks With Clean Slate".
635:, March 16, 1992; Mailander, "From Teacher to Union Boss",
1201:
417:
representing all categories of public school employees.
276:
the budget, and Republican legislators upheld the veto.
1021:
Farrington, Brendan. "Teachers Union a Factor in Fla".
1007:
Eckhart, Robert. "Lawsuit Accuses Ex-Worker of Theft".
942:, October 4, 2001; "Teachers' Union Missing $ 40,000",
641:, September 17, 1996; Park, "The Old School of Power",
507:
Classroom Teachers Association. And in April 2003, the
1218:
787:
Lamee, "Schools, Union Start Talks With Clean Slate",
533:
after two previous unsuccessful organizing elections.
99:
1196:
1042:
Hirschman, Bill. "Teachers Union President Resigns".
375:
1223:
855:
Sutton, "Two Teachers Unions Moving Toward Merger",
761:, 1985; Pollock, "Batchelder Named Parade Marshal",
1137:. Washington, D.C.: Howard University Press, 1985.
1105:Pollock, Allan. "Batchelder Named Parade Marshal".
1028:Fish, Sandra. "School Crisis Echoes '67 Deadlock".
979:Berry, Mike. "Teacher Unions Want to Join Forces".
164:Local affiliates of the FEA formed in almost every
342:Dade County Classroom Teachers Association v. Ryan
219:
1241:
1207:National Council of Urban Education Associations
483:) defeated a better-known and funded candidate (
308:
1070:Mailander, Jodi. "From Teacher to Union Boss".
1035:Goldman, Ted. "School Workers Vote for Union".
993:DeSimone, Jim. "Florida Union Chief Unseated".
700:Farrell, "1968 Strike a Landmark for Schools",
412:school district. In 1998, full-time faculty at
171:
260:promised to improve educational funding. The
1275:Statewide trade unions in the United States
629:Fish, "School Crisis Echoes '67 Deadlock",
564:Hillsborough Classroom Teachers Association
800:Goldman, "School Workers Vote for Union",
774:DeSimone, "Florida Union Chief Unseated",
625:
623:
621:
619:
617:
615:
465:
226:Florida statewide teachers' strike of 1968
986:Davis, Chris. "Union Dumps State Group".
851:
849:
609:, page 187. Oxford University Press, 1999
531:Florida Community College at Jacksonville
1098:Park, Paula. "The Old School of Power".
972:Bell, Maya. "Union Chief Faces Battle".
731:
729:
727:
696:
694:
692:
690:
688:
612:
1242:
846:
724:
685:
242:counties were placed under sanction.
1161:"Teachers' Union Missing $ 40,000".
1086:Florida State University Law Review
13:
1179:. New York: The Free Press, 1980.
826:Davis, "Union Dumps State Group",
376:Collective bargaining and conflict
14:
1291:
1190:
881:state, FEA "represented" 240,000
385:influential executive committee.
336:unconstitutional under Florida's
1270:Trade unions established in 1886
1226:
148:
24:
1255:American Federation of Teachers
1197:American Federation of Teachers
949:
923:
914:
901:
871:
862:
833:
820:
807:
794:
781:
768:
220:1968 statewide teachers' strike
128:American Federation of Teachers
1265:National Education Association
1250:1886 establishments in Florida
1219:National Education Association
742:
715:
676:"Education: Teachers' Boycott"
669:
656:
599:
576:
460:
134:(NEA), and is a member of the
132:National Education Association
1:
1202:Florida Education Association
966:
751:American Teachers Association
351:
309:Securing the right to bargain
201:United Federation of Teachers
112:Florida Education Association
19:Florida Education Association
1112:"Professors to Join Union".
813:"Professors to Join Union",
588:"Teachers: Showdown in Utah"
519:
414:Miami-Dade Community College
7:
1156:Ft. Lauderdale Sun-Sentinel
1114:Ft. Lauderdale Sun-Sentinel
1044:Ft. Lauderdale Sun-Sentinel
974:Ft. Lauderdale Sun-Sentinel
940:Ft. Lauderdale Sun-Sentinel
932:Ft. Lauderdale Sun-Sentinel
892:Ft. Lauderdale Sun-Sentinel
815:Ft. Lauderdale Sun-Sentinel
557:
494:
172:Beginning of the modern era
10:
1296:
1212:February 18, 2007, at the
584:Utah Education Association
536:
223:
436:
423:United Faculty of Florida
94:
76:
66:
50:
40:
32:
23:
1163:Vero Beach Press Journal
944:Vero Beach Press Journal
569:
1280:Trade unions in Florida
1234:Organized labour portal
1009:Sarasota Herald-Tribune
988:Sarasota Herald-Tribune
936:Sarasota Herald-Tribune
828:Sarasota Herald-Tribune
501:Port Charlotte, Florida
466:Political effectiveness
1260:Education trade unions
473:classroom overcrowding
72:Andrew Spar, president
1135:The Teacher Rebellion
1123:. September 24, 1996.
1102:. September 19, 1996.
1074:. September 17, 1996.
1025:. September 25, 2002.
997:. September 23, 1993.
877:Because Florida is a
778:, September 23, 1993.
759:The Teacher Rebellion
737:The Teacher Rebellion
653:, September 24, 1996.
318:Florida Supreme Court
193:collective bargaining
1172:. February 21, 1993.
1170:St. Petersburg Times
1149:St. Petersburg Times
1121:St. Petersburg Times
1079:St. Petersburg Times
1051:Theory Into Practice
1037:St. Petersburg Times
1002:St. Petersburg Times
909:St. Petersburg Times
857:St. Petersburg Times
841:St. Petersburg Times
802:St. Petersburg Times
712:, February 21, 1993.
710:St. Petersburg Times
664:Theory Into Practice
650:St. Petersburg Times
188:of teaching staffs.
45:Tallahassee, Florida
1165:. January 22, 2003.
1151:. October 23, 1990.
1093:Florida Times-Union
1053:. 4:2 (April 1965).
1018:. February 2, 1998.
1004:. October 23, 1987.
957:Florida Times-Union
946:, January 22, 2003.
859:, October 23, 1990.
843:, October 23, 1987.
316:Later in 1968, the
180:, a teacher in the
122:in the US state of
20:
1107:Cape Cod Chronicle
1046:. October 4, 2001.
763:Cape Cod Chronicle
682:, August 17, 1962.
258:Claude R. Kirk Jr.
18:
1081:. March 16, 1987.
1039:. April 27, 1990.
1032:. March 16, 1992.
1011:. March 29, 2001.
990:. March 31, 1998.
911:, March 25, 2002.
830:, March 31, 1998.
804:, April 27, 1990.
511:and Miami police
447:no-raid agreement
266:state legislature
108:
107:
1287:
1236:
1231:
1230:
1128:Associated Press
1116:. March 6, 1998.
1109:. June 30, 2005.
1095:. July 31, 2002.
1067:. July 26, 1990.
1065:Orlando Sentinel
1060:. June 19, 2000.
1058:Orlando Sentinel
1030:Orlando Sentinel
1023:Associated Press
995:Orlando Sentinel
981:Orlando Sentinel
960:
959:, July 31, 2002.
953:
947:
927:
921:
918:
912:
905:
899:
898:, June 19, 2000.
896:Orlando Sentinel
888:Orlando Sentinel
875:
869:
866:
860:
853:
844:
837:
831:
824:
818:
817:, March 6, 1998.
811:
805:
798:
792:
791:, July 26, 1990.
789:Orlando Sentinel
785:
779:
776:Orlando Sentinel
772:
766:
765:, June 30, 2005.
746:
740:
733:
722:
719:
713:
706:Orlando Sentinel
698:
683:
673:
667:
660:
654:
632:Orlando Sentinel
627:
610:
605:Wilson, Sondra.
603:
597:
580:
505:St. Lucie County
268:approved higher
205:public relations
104:
101:
59:
28:
21:
17:
1295:
1294:
1290:
1289:
1288:
1286:
1285:
1284:
1240:
1239:
1232:
1225:
1214:Wayback Machine
1193:
1175:West, Allen M.
1158:. May 21, 1999.
1133:Selden, David.
1130:. July 2, 1996.
1100:Miami New Times
983:. June 6, 1998.
976:. May 19, 2003.
969:
964:
963:
954:
950:
928:
924:
919:
915:
906:
902:
876:
872:
867:
863:
854:
847:
838:
834:
825:
821:
812:
808:
799:
795:
786:
782:
773:
769:
747:
743:
734:
725:
720:
716:
699:
686:
674:
670:
661:
657:
644:Miami New Times
628:
613:
604:
600:
596:. May 24, 1963.
581:
577:
572:
560:
539:
522:
497:
468:
463:
439:
427:Sarasota County
410:Hernando County
378:
366:Florida AFL–CIO
354:
311:
228:
222:
174:
166:school district
151:
98:
69:
62:
57:
12:
11:
5:
1293:
1283:
1282:
1277:
1272:
1267:
1262:
1257:
1252:
1238:
1237:
1222:
1221:
1216:
1204:
1199:
1192:
1191:External links
1189:
1188:
1187:
1173:
1166:
1159:
1152:
1145:
1131:
1124:
1117:
1110:
1103:
1096:
1089:
1082:
1075:
1068:
1061:
1054:
1047:
1040:
1033:
1026:
1019:
1012:
1005:
998:
991:
984:
977:
968:
965:
962:
961:
948:
922:
913:
900:
870:
861:
845:
832:
819:
806:
793:
780:
767:
741:
723:
714:
684:
668:
655:
611:
598:
574:
573:
571:
568:
567:
566:
559:
556:
538:
535:
526:school voucher
521:
518:
496:
493:
475:and salaries.
467:
464:
462:
459:
455:Maureen Dinnen
438:
435:
377:
374:
353:
350:
346:225 So. 2d 903
333:constitutional
310:
307:
303:strikebreakers
281:Tangerine Bowl
248:property taxes
224:Main article:
221:
218:
173:
170:
150:
147:
130:(AFT) and the
106:
105:
96:
92:
91:
78:
74:
73:
70:
67:
64:
63:
61:
60:
54:
52:
48:
47:
42:
38:
37:
34:
30:
29:
9:
6:
4:
3:
2:
1292:
1281:
1278:
1276:
1273:
1271:
1268:
1266:
1263:
1261:
1258:
1256:
1253:
1251:
1248:
1247:
1245:
1235:
1229:
1224:
1220:
1217:
1215:
1211:
1208:
1205:
1203:
1200:
1198:
1195:
1194:
1186:
1185:0-02-934880-3
1182:
1178:
1174:
1171:
1167:
1164:
1160:
1157:
1153:
1150:
1146:
1144:
1143:0-88258-099-X
1140:
1136:
1132:
1129:
1125:
1122:
1118:
1115:
1111:
1108:
1104:
1101:
1097:
1094:
1090:
1088:. 1:1 (1973).
1087:
1083:
1080:
1076:
1073:
1069:
1066:
1062:
1059:
1055:
1052:
1048:
1045:
1041:
1038:
1034:
1031:
1027:
1024:
1020:
1017:
1013:
1010:
1006:
1003:
999:
996:
992:
989:
985:
982:
978:
975:
971:
970:
958:
952:
945:
941:
937:
933:
926:
917:
910:
904:
897:
893:
889:
884:
880:
879:right-to-work
874:
865:
858:
852:
850:
842:
836:
829:
823:
816:
810:
803:
797:
790:
784:
777:
771:
764:
760:
756:
752:
745:
738:
732:
730:
728:
718:
711:
707:
703:
697:
695:
693:
691:
689:
681:
677:
672:
666:, April 1965.
665:
659:
652:
651:
646:
645:
640:
639:
634:
633:
626:
624:
622:
620:
618:
616:
608:
602:
595:
594:
589:
585:
579:
575:
565:
562:
561:
555:
551:
548:
543:
534:
532:
527:
517:
514:
510:
506:
502:
492:
490:
486:
482:
476:
474:
458:
456:
450:
448:
443:
434:
430:
428:
424:
418:
415:
411:
406:
403:
398:
396:
392:
386:
382:
373:
369:
367:
361:
357:
349:
347:
343:
339:
334:
329:
327:
326:214 So. 2d 34
323:
319:
314:
306:
304:
299:
297:
292:
290:
286:
282:
277:
275:
271:
267:
263:
259:
256:
253:
249:
243:
241:
237:
231:
227:
217:
214:
209:
206:
202:
198:
194:
189:
187:
186:desegregation
183:
179:
169:
167:
162:
160:
159:school boards
156:
149:Early history
146:
144:
139:
137:
133:
129:
125:
121:
117:
113:
103:
97:
93:
90:
86:
82:
79:
75:
71:
65:
58:United States
56:
55:
53:
49:
46:
43:
39:
35:
31:
27:
22:
16:
1176:
1169:
1162:
1155:
1148:
1134:
1127:
1120:
1113:
1106:
1099:
1092:
1085:
1078:
1072:Miami Herald
1071:
1064:
1057:
1050:
1043:
1036:
1029:
1022:
1016:Miami Herald
1015:
1008:
1001:
994:
987:
980:
973:
956:
951:
943:
939:
935:
931:
925:
916:
908:
903:
895:
891:
887:
882:
873:
864:
856:
840:
835:
827:
822:
814:
809:
801:
796:
788:
783:
775:
770:
762:
758:
744:
736:
717:
709:
705:
702:Miami Herald
701:
679:
671:
663:
658:
648:
642:
638:Miami Herald
636:
630:
606:
601:
591:
578:
552:
544:
540:
523:
498:
481:Bill McBride
477:
469:
451:
444:
440:
431:
419:
407:
399:
387:
383:
379:
370:
362:
358:
355:
341:
338:constitution
332:
330:
321:
315:
312:
300:
293:
278:
264:-controlled
244:
240:Hillsborough
232:
229:
210:
190:
178:Pat Tornillo
175:
163:
152:
140:
120:labor unions
115:
111:
109:
77:Affiliations
41:Headquarters
15:
755:Los Angeles
461:Post-merger
272:. But Kirk
270:sales taxes
213:Dade County
182:Dade County
155:association
1244:Categories
967:References
485:Janet Reno
352:FEA splits
262:Democratic
252:Republican
68:Key people
883:potential
520:Successes
320:ruled in
296:sin taxes
1210:Archived
735:Selden,
558:See also
495:Scandals
489:Jeb Bush
433:45,000.
397:member.
289:Pinellas
255:Governor
51:Location
739:, 1985.
537:Changes
285:Orlando
236:Broward
197:strikes
136:AFL–CIO
124:Florida
95:Website
89:AFL–CIO
33:Founded
1183:
1141:
513:raided
437:Merger
402:raided
391:AFCSME
274:vetoed
238:, and
143:strike
100:feaweb
570:Notes
547:Duval
1181:ISBN
1139:ISBN
680:Time
593:Time
195:and
110:The
102:.org
36:1886
509:FBI
491:).
395:CWA
283:in
116:FEA
85:NEA
81:AFT
1246::
848:^
726:^
687:^
678:.
614:^
590:.
586::
368:.
344:,
324:,
250:.
138:.
87:,
83:,
114:(
Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.