NJEA Leadership Wants to Turn the NJEA into a Giant “Spiller for Governor” PAC
August 29, 2024NJEA President Sean Spiller Tries to Use Teacher Shortage to Bolster His Run for Governor
September 11, 2024The NJEA has long had the highest dues in the nation, but now by an even larger margin. NJEA leadership just hiked teachers’ annual dues to $1,082 from $1,038, a 4.2% increase. That’s up 8.2% over the past two years. The second-highest dues belong to the far-larger California Teachers Association (CTA) which increased their dues by 3.8% to $816, so NJEA dues are now 33% higher than CTA dues, up from 32% higher last year. On the other hand, perhaps recognizing the squeeze on households from inflation, the Michigan Education Association (MEA) kept their dues flat at $655. Of course, the CTA and MEA aren’t looking to use teachers’ dues to fund a gubernatorial run by their union president the way NJEA is. That NJEA-backed Super PAC primed to spend $35 million to support NJEA President/gubernatorial candidate Sean Spiller will need money from somewhere.
Here’s the data for 2024-25 dues for NJEA, CTA, NEA-Alaska*, MEA and the Massachusetts Teachers Association. (NJEA, CTA, NEA-Alaska, and MEA have long been in the top five, and we added Massachusetts because it is a state to which the NJEA often compares New Jersey’s public education system). Here’s the data:
- New Jersey: $1,082
- CTA: $816
- NEA-Alaska: $806
- MEA: $655
- Massachusetts TA: $556
The NJEA’s national parent, the National Education Association (NEA), also increased its dues to $213, or 2.4%, so here is an estimate of the 2024-25 total dues burden for a full-time New Jersey teacher:
- NJEA: $1,082
- NEA: $213
- Local association**: $185
- County association**: $45
- TOTAL: $1,525
$1,525 is a lot of money for a New Jersey teacher, who on average earns $81,102 a year. It’s even more for a beginning teacher who earns less than $60,000 a year.
Then again, it costs a lot of money to fund the personal political ambitions of an NJEA president who wants to be governor. NJEA leadership has already given $8 million to Spiller’s personal Super PAC (Protecting Our Democracy), and is looking to spend another $35 million via a newly created NJEA-backed Super PAC (Working New Jersey). That money has to come from somewhere.
* NEA-Alaska dues were $745 for 2022-23. To give a sense of what its dues were in 2024-25 to compare to the NJEA, we increased the 2022-23 dues by 8.3% — the same percentage that NJEA dues were increased — to $806.
** NJEA dues have historically comprised 70% of total dues; NEA 15%; local 12%; and county 3%. We used the 12% figure to back into the $185 amount for local dues and the 3% figure for county dues, both of which vary across the state.
