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Teachers tussle in Bulgaria
09:00 Mon 24 Sep 2007 - Petar Kostadinov
 
TAKING A STAND: Jim Guittard from the US has written <br>a song in support of the Bulgarian teachers demanding <br>salary increases. Guittard is an English teacher at the Simeon Radev <br>Secondary Language School in Pernik near Sofia. ‘My passion is<br> music and this is how I express my views and this was my<br> motivation to write and compose Stachkata (The Strike),’<br> Guittard told The Sofia Echo. ‘I know that as a Peace <br>Corps volunteer I am not supposed to take any stand, but I see what<br> teachers in Bulgaria have to go through every day and I think that <br>they deserve to be paid well. There are always ways to find money,’<br> Guittard said. The song is written in Bulgarian and Guittard describes<br> it as in the Bob Dylan style. The song is available at <br>http://www.archive.org/details/Stochkata<br> Photo: PETAR KOSTADINOV
TAKING A STAND: Jim Guittard from the US has written
a song in support of the Bulgarian teachers demanding
salary increases. Guittard is an English teacher at the Simeon Radev
Secondary Language School in Pernik near Sofia. ‘My passion is
music and this is how I express my views and this was my
motivation to write and compose Stachkata (The Strike),’
Guittard told The Sofia Echo. ‘I know that as a Peace
Corps volunteer I am not supposed to take any stand, but I see what
teachers in Bulgaria have to go through every day and I think that
they deserve to be paid well. There are always ways to find money,’
Guittard said. The song is written in Bulgarian and Guittard describes
it as in the Bob Dylan style. The song is available at
http://www.archive.org/details/Stochkata
Photo: PETAR KOSTADINOV

For yet another week, the Bulgarian Teachers Union (BTU) and Education Minister Daniel Vulchev have failed to achieve a compromise to stave off a teachers’ strike.

Again the main actor on the stage was BTU leader Yanka Takeva. The first school day of the school year, September 15, went as planned by Takeva, who wants a 100 per cent increase of teachers’ salaries as of October 1. Teachers staged a one-hour protest by sitting in their classrooms while pupils and parents waited outside the school for the official programme to begin. This was just a warning for Vulchev, because Takeva said that if nothing changed by September 24, teachers would embark on a full-scale strike.

Takeva and Vulchev offered widely varying numbers of how many teachers took part in the one-hour protest. Takeva said that 81 per cent participated. Vulchev said that the exact number was just 9.92 per cent.

While the two were tussling over numbers, Takeva’s boss Zhelyazko Hristov, leader of one of the biggest trade unions KNSB, called on Vulchev to resign.

Vulchev was to blame for “bad management in the system of higher and secondary education, as well as in science”, according to Hristov. Vulchev, a Sofia University professor in law, had to witness his own university colleagues marching against him on September 15. University professors together with students and scientists from the Bulgarian Academy of Science rallied against inadequate funding for education in Bulgaria.

Takeva came under attack from her own, for a statement that she made on September 17. In Shoumen, Takeva said that “we shall suggest that the agreement with the Government feature a clause that teachers who are not on strike will not get a salary increase”.

This was later denied by Hristov who said that Takeva must have been misunderstood and probably she herself “must have got it wrong”. In various internet blogs, people posting comments presenting themselves as teachers harshly criticised Takeva’s position as undemocratic, with some calling on her to resign from the BTU leadership.

 
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Comments
 
Comments by Viktor - 00:18 16 Apr 2008
What a nice song that Guittard wrote! I wish him well in music.
 
 
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