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Statewide Victories

We can accomplish so much when we work together and speak up for our students, public schools and colleges and communities.
MTA members, allies and parents at the Yes on 2 hearing speaking in front of Massachusetts State House Eric Haynes
MTA members, allies, and parents speaking at the Yes on 2 hearing in front of the Massachusetts State House.

Key Moments in Our Fight for Students and Educators

Here are some of our recent victories at the state level. MTA locals have successfuly won key contract gains including Paid Family and Medical Leave and a living wage for Education Support Professionals.
January 2025
President Joe Biden with an unidentified man and MTA President Max Page in January 2025 at the signing of GPO-WEP repeal legislation.

Social Security Fairness Act

The Social Security Fairness Act, signed into law on January 5, 2025, was a major win for unions and public employees. The law repealed the Windfall Elimination Provision and the Government Pension Offset, allowing MTA members and other public employees to reclaim Social Security benefits they had previously lost.
November 2024
MTA members and staff campaigning for Yes on Question 2, which aimed to remove high-stakes testing, at the Melrose Farmers Market in October 2024.

High-Stakes Testing

MTA members helped lead the fight to pass Question 2 – a ballot question to eliminate the MCAS graduation requirement – a key step in ending high-stakes testing that narrows learning and limits opportunities. This victory puts educators back in the driver’s seat, allowing assessments to support instruction – not define it – and ensures students have access to a richer, more meaningful education. This fight continues as the implementation at the state level is underway.
November 2022
Max Page speaking at a press conference celebrating the victory of the Massachusetts Fair Share Amendment (“Yes on 1”).

Fair Share Amendment

Massachusetts voters approved the Fair Share Amendment, creating a 4% surcharge on incomes over $1 million to fund education, transportation, and public services. Since its introduction in FY24, $6.4 billion in tax revenue has been designated for transportation and public education. In more specific terms, the state Legislature has appropriated $2.58 billion for transportation and $3.85 billion for public education as a result of the Fair Share Amendment.
November 2016
Graphic stating that Question 2 would have opened the floodgates to privatize public education, but voters rejected it 62% to 38%

Voters Reject Major Charter School Expansion

Massachusetts made history when voters overwhelmingly defeated a ballot measure to raise the cap on charter schools. Question 2, the most expensive charter initiative in the country, was defeated thanks to the tireless advocacy of educators, unions, and community supporters who opposed the privatization of public schools.
Danielle Seltzer is a teacher at Amherst-Pelham Regional High School
Passing Question 2 allows students to earn a diploma the way it should be earned – through enriching, relevant, deep learning that is so much more than a test score.
Quote by: Danielle Seltzer, Amherst-Pelham Regional High School
A rally of teachers with a hand holding a megaphone

Join Our Union

Stand with educators across Massachusetts! Join the MTA to fight for strong schools, fair resources and the future our students and communities deserve.
Massachusetts Teachers Association logo

A Diverse Union of Education Workers

The MTA represents 117,000 members in 400 local associations throughout Massachusetts. We are teachers, faculty, professional staff and Education Support Professionals working at public schools, colleges and universities across Massachusetts.