 Appalachian Wireless now has new forward pay pricing, where you can pay up front and get the data and features you desire. 5GB of data, just $39.99. Unlimited, just $79.99. Better service, bigger savings. That's today's Appalachian Wireless. A little more than a day removed from the massive rally in Frankfort, educators gathered in the Pockel City Park to show unity with one another. Dozens of educators from Pocke County and other areas packed into the Pockel City Park Tuesday afternoon to continue to voice their opposition to the recent legislative action taken on education in Frankfort. So if you think what we're doing today, if you encourage all over this state and all over this country, you're wrong. What you're doing is powerful and it's meaningful and people are listening to us. The event came on a day when Pocke County Schools was closed due to a rash of call-ins among teachers. Once so many teachers called in sick with the sewer flu last night and our superintendent had a call off school today, we got busy on social media and quickly realized that our people wanted to get back together today and they wanted to rally and show support for public education. We feel like we've been under attack for the last few months and we wanted to show our governor that we're not ignorant and uninformed and we're not thugs. A food drive coincided with the event. I need school area, Eastridge, all the different areas will take their food and distribute it to the respective areas that kids with kids in need and you know just try to help our students out. House Democratic leader Rocky Adkins was one of several legislators in attendance. Adkins said the three bills passed recently in the state legislature that deal with education are ultimately bad for public education. He said he's glad teachers are getting involved. But these teachers have united from Pikeville to Paducah to fight for the future of public education and the Commonwealth of Kentucky and that's been very moving to see an energy like this across Kentucky energized in a way that I have not seen in my 31 years in public office. Other Eastern Kentucky legislators were also in attendance. All the way to school at our public school and I'm proud to send my kids to public schools because I trust teachers like you. Let's go. We remember? We remember? In November. We'll remember? In November. All right. Thank you guys so much. God bless you. Tuesday's rally ended with a march through downtown Pikeville. In downtown Pikeville, Chris Anderson, EKB News.