Warwick School Committee Chooses the Tough Path, by Marc Comtois
Warwick
8:00 AM, 08/ 4/10
Warwick School Committee , by Marc Comtois
Warwick
8:00 AM, 08/ 4/10
Thinking About War, by Justin Katz
Foreign Affairs
5:42 AM, 08/ 4/10
On Ethics: Maxine Now, Maxine Then, by Monique Chartier
National Politics
7:48 PM, 08/ 3/10
Green, but Smart, by Justin Katz
Environment
1:50 PM, 08/ 3/10
The Arts Should Be Conservative, by Justin Katz
Culture
9:44 AM, 08/ 3/10
RE: Shifting Packs, Political and Economic, by Marc Comtois
Democrats on the March
9:00 AM, 08/ 3/10
When the Pack Shifts to the Back, by Justin Katz
Rhode Island Politics
5:16 AM, 08/ 3/10
A Guide for Candidates for Engaging the Issues , by Carroll Andrew Morse
Self-Government
2:00 PM, 08/ 2/10
Whitewashing Over Faith, by Justin Katz
Religion
1:41 PM, 08/ 2/10
August 4, 2010
Warwick School Committee
Faced with an insurmountable $13 million cut in state and local funding, the Warwick School Committee voted to freeze pay and impose a 20% health care co-pay for all of its employees last night.
Before the vote, School Committee Chairman Chris Friel stressed that these are not actions the district wants to take but it has no choice faced with insufficient funding for its budget of about $161 million for the current fiscal year, which began July 1.Unions are not happy.He said the district did not want to cut programs that directly affect students, such as sports, gifted classes, mentoring and all extracurricular activities.
The action is in apparent violation of the School Department's contract with its roughly 1,000 teachers represented by the Warwick Teachers Union, with teachers slated to lose a 2.75 percent raise this year....The leaders of the two unions that represent almost all school employees - the teachers union and the Warwick Independent School Employees union - vowed that they will respond with swift court action.The union has been playing the "we'd get back to you" game or the "we're willing to listen" game for some time now. The School Committee is obligated to have its budget finalized shortly after the City Council approves the school budget and was already late in doing so. They couldn't wait any longer. The situation called for urgency and the unions seemed to be content with playing the same collective bargaining games that worked in the past. That isn't working any more. Next stop, the courthouse."I feel stabbed in the back," teachers union president James Ginolfi said, noting that the first he and other union executives heard of the School Committee's plan was less than an hour before it took action in executive session.
"We listened to what they had to say and said we'd get back to you," Ginolfi said, adding that the school board is sending a public message that it has no regard for a legal agreement. "I am shocked," he said.