From Ballotpedia | Florida Education Association | |
![]() | |
| Basic facts | |
| Location: | Tallahassee, Fla. |
| Type: | 501(c)(5) |
| Top official: | Joanne McCall, President |
| Website: | Official website |
The Florida Education Association (FEA) is a school union in the state of Florida. The organization is the state affiliate of the National Education Association. Florida is a right to work state, so public school teachers do not have to belong to the state-wide union.
According the FEA's website, the organization's mission statement is:[1]
| “ |
|
” |
The FEA was formed in 2000 after the merging of two state education associations, the Florida Teaching Profession-NEA and the FEA/United. The group dates its origins to 1886 when the first organization of professional educators, known as the Florida Education Association, was formed in Florida. According to the Florida Center for Investigative Reporting, the original organization split in two in the 1970s with "one connected to the National Education Association and the other to the American Federation of Teachers, each filing its own tax return."[3]
The group characterizes its work and origins in the history section of its website, stating, "The Florida Education Association represents more than 250,000 teachers and education staff professional in Florida’s 67 school districts. For over a century, the FEA has been the leading advocate of raising the quality of education in Florida’s public schools, and of increasing the dignity and status of all teachers and education staff professionals."[4]
| Influencers |
|---|
![]() |
| State affiliates of the National Education Association |
The FEA offers a number of professional services to its members. Members are also given membership in the National Education Association and the American Federation of Teachers. The group offers legal services as well as professional development opportunities, such as the Summer Academy, where teachers learn about management skills, leadership, political advocacy, and organizing.[5]
The FEA actively lobbies the Florida State Legislature on issues related to public education. In 2015, the organization released a series of white paper reports outlining the FEA's positions on eight public education issues. The following are the issues identified by the FEA along with a short excerpt from the group's policy statement:[6]
The website for the Florida Education Association lists the following individuals as members of the organization's executive cabinet:[7]
In 2013, the FEA had its nonprofit tax status revoked by the IRS because the group had not submitted tax returns for three consecutive years. According to the Florida Center for Investigative Reporting, the organization mixed up tax identification numbers for the IRS. The Center reported, "It was a hangover from the 2000 move to merge the FEAs. The entity was filing its taxes, but under a number that was for some reason evading the IRS bureaucracy."[3] In a phone conversation with Ballotpedia, FEA spokesperson Mark Pudlow confirmed that the organization had since had its tax status restored; it was recognized as a 501(c)(5) organization by the IRS, according to Pudlow.[8]
The link below is to the most recent stories in a Google news search for the terms 'Florida Education Association'. These results are automatically generated from Google. Ballotpedia does not curate or endorse these articles.
| |||||||
| |||||
Categories: [Florida influencers] [501(c)(5)] [Organizations] [Education policy influencers] [Labor policy influencers] [Lobbyists] [National Education Association]