The
KCEA Officers
We Did It!
President Tanya T. Coats
After some very long years...
Advocate HAPPY NEW YEAR!
By Tanya T. Coats, KCEA President
I would like to take this opportunity to wish all a very Happy New Year! The Knox County Education Association is Secretary extremely excited about this New KCEA representatives reached agreement with Judy Barnes Year full of continuing opportunities school board representatives over the terms of a Treasurer applicable to your professional MOU (Memorandum Of Understanding, or what was Karen Peterman organization of choice. Thank you for allowing us to formerly called a contract) that will, under the Past President Professional Educators Collaborative Conferencing provide excellent representation and phenomenal Sherry Morgan Act of 2011 (PECCA), be in force for the next three support. Great things are sure to come that foster _____________ great feelings. Taking each day one step at a time is all years. The MOU maintains the current salary Executive Board structure, but it also includes a 4% average salary that our hopes and dreams are made of. We must Representatives increase each year for the next three years, pending continue to be avid fighters for justice in public allocation of adequate resources by the county Elementary Schools education and build a Eric Aguilar commission and the state. The agreement also capacity of leadership that Ashley Anthony maintains current-dollar funding of insurance and Megan Blevins relies on one another to adds bereavement leave. For full details, see the Amy Duncan strengthen our firm MOU, which is posted on the KCEA website: Middle Schools foundation on which we www.kceaintouch.org Marche Lee have established. The Paula Hancock Holiday Break was good for us. As you reflect upon all High Schools Chad Negendank your New Year’s Chuck O’Donnell resolutions, do not forget NEA President Lily Eskelson Garcia and KCEA President Tanya T. Coats Administrator at Large the most important one, Jessica Holman the Knox County Education Association. It is just like Alternative Schools having a gym membership, you can buy a plan to work Connie Mitchell out, but if you just hold the card without actually going Minority at Large President Coats (l) and Matt McWhirter (r) celeinto the gym to put in some sweat equity; what are the Joan Washington Vice President Heather Wallace
By Matt McWhirter KCEA PECCA Chair
brating the PECCA team’s collaborative efforts!
Support Personnel Joe Sumter Parliamentarian Anthony Hancock _____________
TEA / NEA TEA District 4 Seat Anthony Hancock NEA Resolutions Anthony Hancock _____
KCEA Office UniServ Duran Williams Executive Assistant Abbie Hoover
The NEA UniServ Program What does the term “UniServ” mean? It is short for Unified Services. The UniServ program began in Tennessee in the early 1970s. The National Education Association (NEA) provided grants to state affiliates to hire field staff to work with NEA and state affiliate members at the local level. The NEA grant continues to provide resources to the Tennessee Education Association (TEA) and other state affiliates to continue partially funding this important program of service to NEA/TEA/LEA members. The UniServ program in Tennessee grew from “a handful” of trained field staff to over two dozen highly trained professionals who work with TEA members everyday across Tennessee. The UniServ program trains field staff to work with local affiliates and members in professional development, political organizing, building local affiliate capacity, licensure issues, leadership opportunities for members, and representational guidance in employee related matters. The NEA and TEA are the only organizations in Tennessee who represent educators and educational support professionals in all aspects of their profession. TEA UniServ field staff visit schools across the state every day. UniServ work with TEA members in their home towns and schools. NEA/TEA UniServ – an important member of your local affiliate team!
What is a UniServ? Richard Lee (l), Duran Williams (c) and Ashley Nivens (r) at Halls MS visit about Legislative updates, teacher licensure changes and state salary increases.