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The NEA reported a membership of 766,000 in 1961. [30] In 2007, at the 150th anniversary of its founding, NEA membership had grown to 3.2 million. [31] However, by July 2012, USA Today reported that NEA had lost nearly 0.3% of their members each year since 2010. [32] Following the Supreme Court's 2018 Janus v.
The AEA is an affiliate of the National Education Association (NEA), the nation's largest professional employee organization. The AEA's stated mission is "to promote educational excellence, the Alabama Education Association shall serve as the advocate for its members and shall lead in the advancement of equitable and quality public education ...
But despite the conflict, the two unions remained remarkably evenly matched. By 1987, FTP-NEA's membership had risen to about 37,000 members, while FEA-United's membership stood at about 30,000 members. [15] By 2000, when the two unions merged, FTP-NEA membership had risen to 60,000 while FEA-United had 45,000. [16]
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NEA's insistence that CTAs, MSTA districts, and the state organization unify with NEA into one dues-structured organization led the Assembly of Delegates to vote in 1972 to remain independent so that every Missouri educator would have the choice of whether or not to join a professional association instead of a union. Other MSTA victories include: