Open Letter to Oklahoma Voters and Lawmakers


I am a teacher. I teach English at the high school of an independent district within Oklahoma City. I love my job. I love your kids. I call them my kids. I keep blankets in my room for when they’re cold. I feed them peanut butter crackers, beef jerky, or Pop Tarts when Michelle Obama’s school breakfast or lunch isn’t enough to fill their bellies. I comfort them when they cry and I praise them when they do well and always I try to make them believe that they are somebody with unlimited potential no matter what they go home to when they leave me.

What do they go home to? Sometimes when they get sick at school they can’t go home because you and the person you’re currently shacking up with are too stoned to figure out it’s your phone ringing. Sometimes they go home to parents who don’t notice them, and those are often the lucky kids. Sometimes they go home to sleep on the neighbor’s back porch because your boyfriend kicked them out of the house and his dog is too mean to let them sleep on their own back porch. They go home to physical and verbal abuse. They go home looking for love and acceptance from the people who created them … and too often they don’t find it.

Many days your children bring the resentment they feel toward you to school with them and they act out against peers, property, or their teachers. When I call you I’m told, “When he’s at school he’s your problem.” Or you beat them, not for what they did, but because it embarrassed or inconvenienced you when I called.

Often, they stay at school with me for an hour and a half after the bell rings because they don’t want to go home to you. Reluctantly, they get on the two buses meant to take home students who stay for athletic practice, and they go away for a dark night in places I can’t imagine.

Over 90 percent of the kids in my high school are on the free or reduced lunch programs. The walk hand-in-hand with Poverty and its brother Violence. They find comfort in the arms of your lover, Addiction. They make babies before they are old enough to vote. Or drive. And they continue the cycle you put them in.

Sometimes I get through to a student and convince her that education is the way out of this spiral of poverty and despair. Then you slap them down for wanting to be better than you.

And you, the lawmakers of this state, you encourage it. I hold two college degrees and have been on my job for 10 years. I was our school’s Teacher of the Year in 2014. I teach kids to read the ballots that keep you in your elite position. I teach them to look behind your lies and rhetoric. I teach them to think for  themselves. The compensation of me and my colleagues ranks 49th in the nation, and is the lowest in our region. I currently earn about $18,000 per year less than I did in 2002, my last year as an office worker for an energy company that merged with another and eliminated my job. I feel like my life has purpose now, but, as I turn 50 this year and wonder how I’ll put my own high school-age kids through college, I have to consider giving up helping scores of kids per year so I can afford to give my own children what they need to find satisfaction in their lives.

And what do you do? You whittle away at education funding. You waste the taxpayers’ money so that our great state faces unbelievable shortfalls and massive budget cuts. You take home a salary that ranks 10th highest in the nation among state legislators and you are inept, uncaring, and an abomination to our democratic form of government.

Those kids who stay after school with me? After Spring Break 2016 they can’t do that. You see, our district can no longer afford to pay to run those late buses. Your kids wade through garbage in the halls because we had to release the custodial crew that cleaned at night. Oh sure, we could make the kids clean up after themselves, except our administrators live in fear of lawsuits, and making a kid pick up the lunch tray he threw on the floor has been considered forced child labor. There’s also the very real possibility that a belligerent kid will just take a swing at one of us — again — because he or she wasn’t taught respect for authority at home. Did I mention how we had to let go of our security officers because we could no longer afford them? We now share one single solitary Oklahoma County Sheriff’s deputy with our ninth grade center and our middle school and alternative school. That’s one deputy for about 1,300 students.

We can no longer afford rolls of colored paper or paint or tape to make signs to support and advertise our Student Council activities. This fall our football team won’t charge through a decorated banner as they take the field because we can’t afford to make the banner. There won’t be any new textbooks in the foreseeable future. Broken desks won’t be replaced. We’re about to ration copy paper and we’ve already had the desktop printers taken out of our rooms.

We live in fear that our colleagues will leave us, not just because they are our friends, but because the district wouldn’t replace them even if we could lure new teachers to our inner-city schools during the teacher shortage you have caused. We fear our classes doubling in size.

We fear becoming as ineffective as you are. Not because we can’t or won’t do our job, like you, but because you keep passing mandates to make us better while taking away all the resources we need just to maintain the status quo. We fear that our second jobs will prevent us from grading the papers or creating the lesson plans we already have to do from home. We fear our families will leave us because we don’t have time for them.

I am the chairman of my department. My teachers could easily take other jobs in the private sector where they would make more money, but so far they have chosen to remain teachers because they love working with kids. How long will they continue to put the needs of students over the needs of family? It’s something we’re all dealing with. How far will you push us? What will you do without us when we leave the classroom or leave the state? It’s happening. You know it’s happening, and yet you do nothing.

You, the representatives, senators, and governor of Oklahoma are creating a population of ignorant peasants fit only to work in the oil field and factories you bring to this state by promising those businesses won’t have to pay their fair share of taxes. You leave our kids in a cycle of poverty and abuse while your pet donor oil companies destroy the bedrock beneath us, shaking our homes to pieces while you deny your part in all of it.

Parents, I beg you to love your children the way we love your children. Vote for people who will help teachers educate and nurture the kids we share. We can’t do it alone anymore.

795 responses to “Open Letter to Oklahoma Voters and Lawmakers”

  1. Travis Baldwin Avatar
    Travis Baldwin

    Thank you, thank you, thank you!

  2. I live in an area touted for the lowest taxes in the state of SC, and often that claim outweighs the value of an effective public education. We’ve seen the sameas you – wonderful teachers walk away, either out of financial necessity or simply out of frustration from a constant uphill, and often losing, battle. Whether the result of poverty or a complete devaluing of a solid education, the same results are seen… until we reinstate the importance of education, and that is as much in the home as in the school building, we won’t see the support for our teachers and schools restored. We won’t see respect for educators, who do knowingly go into an area that pays a pittence because they feel a calling to make a difference, until we see a greater respect for education voiced by parents and the community as a whole. I’m not a tax and spend liberal, by any stretch, but taxes spent on our children’s futures isn’t money waisted, it’s none well spent. We can’t afford to continue to hemmorage good teachers at the expense of our children!

  3. […] Reblog- Original Post at  Open Letter to Oklahoma Voters and Lawmakers […]

  4. […] Open Letter to Oklahoma Voters and Lawmakers  from teacher Steve Wedel […]

  5. Bureaucracy and waste make our legislators puppets and sycophants. Pawns of big business and purveyors of their own self interests.

    1. In the by the by. The teachers union donates millions to make puppets of public officials.

  6. It’s a matter of what we value the most in our society. We pay the factory laborers who brew and bottle our beer more than we pay the people we expect to educate our children!

    1. really? I don’t know a single factory laborer who makes the same wage as a teacher in Ohio or most anywhere and with the benefits and pension teachers receive for working essentially 10 months per year

  7. Sadly this scenario is repeated all over this country. One might think that THE most important thing we can do is educate our children. But guns and bombs seem to be more important to our politicians.

  8. I read this and tears come to my eyes…

  9. Did we forget that children are our future? This is happening all over the country. What happens when this generation becomes adults? God help us then.

  10. Your state’s problems are a nation wide problem. Random thinking here. How on earth can anyone expect a teacher with tens if not hundreds of students to replace a parent’s attention and nurturing of just one – or a few children? What has happened where teachers used to be responsible for the education and broadening of young minds — now have to be mini- security guards, trained in event of mass shootings; find and document child abuse, as well as actually be the parents, actual substitutes absolving parents of any real responsibility.

    I dread the thought of certain federal political thought that the federal government get out of the way for certain states that are already failing their future generations. Is this some sort of subversive way to keep the poor, uneducated in some sort of subservience to keep the rich and elite from being corrupted by what might be better, more intelligent intellect, if actually given the chance to rise above believing the rich politicians bull pucky?

    A totally sad commentary on our society. y .

  11. I’m totally on board with everything you said in your letter except for the inexplicable slam at Michelle Obama for wanting children to have healthy food for school. You DO know she didn’t design the school lunches your kids get, right? You DO know the amount and quality of the school lunches they get is actually coming from the school system itself, and those calculations are affected by the same factors of which you are complaining in the rest of your otherwise well-reasoned letter, right?

    There is NOTHING wrong with the First Lady of the United States promoting healthy eating for children. Being FOR healthy school lunches and FOR adequate funding for schools and FOR involved and caring parents … NONE of these are mutually exclusive concepts. Might I point out that children whose diet consists largely of starches, sugars, salt, and fat are not getting proper nutrition and are thus likely to fare more poorly in school? Garbage in, garbage out. Those same children whose diets you’re supplementing are often not getting enough at home, or all they get at home is processed garbage, so maybe the ONLY healthy food they’re getting is in those Michelle Obama inspired school lunches.

    Other than this quibble I fully support everything else you said. This is what happens when we decide to cut taxes because idiot politicians bought the lies of the rich and powerful that cutting taxes somehow results in increased revenue and prosperity for all. I’m sorry you live in a benighted state where forty years of anti-government brainwashing by an entertainment outlet masquerading as a news channel has persuaded otherwise sensible people that they must vote for whoever promises to make the government least effective or responsive to their communities’ needs, and all in the name of “freedom” and “liberty”. I’m sorry that somehow so many people have come to accept the bizarre notion that government has no business educating our children or protecting them from their hellish home lives.

    Most of all I am sorry that we live in a country where teachers are daily vilified and told they are being greedy for wanting a living wage or should only concern themselves with teaching children how to pass arbitrarily designed tests like good little robots. Teachers are never valued until they give or risk their lives to protect their students as teachers have done in every mass school shooting or tornado, at which point we all solemnly note their sacrifice and then go back to bashing teachers the next week.

    My father was a teacher. This letter would have him spinning in his grave.

  12. Sharon Cooney Avatar

    Everything that our President try to do, he is fought tooth and nail. It is not his fault it is the house and the senate, and we all know who is in control of both, so he cant get nothing done. Wake up people it should not be about the rich it should be about the people of America. We need to put all of the rich people out of office and put normal everyday people in office who understand our struggles. The top 1% control this country. They don’t have a clue to how the rest of us live, and frankly I don’t think they care! It is more of us then it is them. We need to demand that the system work for everybody not just the 1%. Look how they waste money, but when it come to the rest of us our programs are cut. I work for the school system for 17 years and what happen they began to privatize bad move, we have to vote them out if they are not for the people they are not the only people in the world who can fill those positions.

    1. what a scary thought process you exhibit. where do you get your information? You sound like a person who drinks the koolaide provided by the current administration.
      You fail to understand that people like Hillary Clinton are multimillionaires. That the rich elites give more money to Dems.
      You fail to understand that the 1% pay almost 75% of all Federal taxes and almost 50% of the population pays NO FEDERAL INCOME TAXES.
      Under what is likely your hero, the middle class is shrinking and more people are on food stamps than at any time.
      Black unemployment is higher than it was under Bush.
      I suggest you stop being envious of others and direct your energy to improving your life and your earnings

    2. “Everything that our President try to do, he is fought tooth and nail. It is not his fault it is the house and the senate, and we all know who is in control of both, so he cant get nothing done. … I work for the school system for 17 years and what happen they began to privatize bad move…”

      Ladies and gentlemen, we are doomed.

      “We have met the enemy and he is us.” – Walt Kelly

    3. The president is an evil wicked man and his heart is at total rebellion against a holy and righteous God. He is taking all of us with him to destruction the way Hitler did Germany, Napoleon did France and other countries in history as well.

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