Labor

Pawlenty:”The moral case for unions…does not apply to public employment.”

By Marc Comtois | December 14, 2010 |

In yesterday’s Wall Street Journal, Minnesota Governor Tim Pawlenty went over familiar ground regarding public employee unions and leads him to conclude: The moral case for unions—protecting working families from exploitation—does not apply to public employment. Government employees today are among the most protected, well-paid employees in the country. Ironically, public-sector unions have become the…

How Are Union Members Like Mushrooms?

By Justin Katz | December 2, 2010 |

National Education Association of Rhode Island President Larry Purtill has sent a message to members of his union: Despite these results, I knew that those who disagree with our vision and mission would not stop their attacks. What I did not suspect was the ferocity that those attacks might take. On the air, outrageous comments…

Spin, Not Denial: Walsh on the Leidecker Charge

By Monique Chartier | December 2, 2010 |

Bob Walsh, Executive Director of the NEA RI, whom we all wish a speedy recovery from his procedure today, called in to the WPRO Dan Yorke Show yesterday morning. After clarifying that his “medical leave” involved a previously scheduled surgery and not a ploy to distract from the NEA’s travails, he went on to address…

The Ability to Take Leads to Tone-Deafness

By Justin Katz | November 30, 2010 |

Sure, President Obama’s proposal to freeze the pay of federal employees is an attempt to start the debate in a position much more favorable than a reasonable political compromise would suggest. The bottom line is that the federal government has to do less and, therefore, require many fewer employees. Still, even as that debate plays…

A Right-Reform Fly on the Wall

By Community Crier | November 29, 2010 | Comments Off on A Right-Reform Fly on the Wall

Remember when a raucous School Committee meeting in East Providence gave reason to hope that the game might be up for the National Education Association’s unchallenged control of Rhode Island education? If so, odds are that Anchor Rising plays in that memory. We liveblogged, photographed, recorded, and analyzed. And it made a difference. Two days…

Foretelling the Future in Cranston

By Justin Katz | November 18, 2010 |

Steven Frias, a Steve Laffey ally of old and author of a book on Cranston’s political history, relates the origin of school committees’ authority to negotiate contracts (even though they can’t tax to pay for them) and binding arbitration for police and fire. Sadly, there are some discouraging parallels to our proximate future: The leader…

Turning the Strike Tables

By Justin Katz | November 13, 2010 |

Helen makes an interesting suggestion: Would a strike of non union people be illegal? If everyone who is not in a union stopped working, if business owners refused to open, would that be illegal? It would certainly be a show of private-sector weight were the Rhode Island economy simply to stop for a couple of…

The Transition to Reinvigorated Decline

By Justin Katz | November 10, 2010 |

Bob Walsh is on Governor-elect Lincoln Chafee’s transition team? National Education Association Rhode Island Executive Director Bob Walsh is preparing the way for Rhode Island’s next governor? Boy, they (you know whom I mean) aren’t even trying to hide it anymore. Two hyperbolic scenarios arise in my imagination. In the first, a simpering Chafee begs,…

Union Theory Proven

By Justin Katz | November 5, 2010 |

The best election-results quotes from Rhode Island conservatives/reformers came out of East Providence: [Soon-to-be-former School Committee Chairman Anthony] Carcieri laughed in the face of defeat and said, “The public has spoken, so get your checkbooks out. We’ll be paying a lot of taxes in the near future.” Soon-to-be-former Mayor Joseph Larisa points to the deeper…

France Has Nothing on the RI Public Sector

By Justin Katz | October 28, 2010 |

Folks are rioting in France because they feel retirement at 60 to be a birthright. In Rhode Island, public-sector unions promote the birthright of retiring much earlier, collecting pensions, and starting second careers. That’s what was on Mark Patinkin’s mind yesterday: Sarkozy is worried that 60 is a ruinously young age for pensions in France,…