Labor

A Freeze Would Preserve Everything

By Justin Katz | May 26, 2010 |

Well, it’s certainly not rocket science, but it’s nice to know that New Jersey’s Governor Chris Christie and I have come to the same conclusion when it comes to schools’ supposed funding problems (subscription required): In the last three years, state and local government-employee compensation grew 9.8 percent, compared with 6.9 percent in the private…

The Subtle Tactics of the NEA

By Justin Katz | May 26, 2010 |

In an article about securing union approval of Rhode Island’s application for federal Race to the Top education funds: [NEARI President Larry] Purtill also said he is carefully monitoring the acrimonious situation in East Providence, where the School Committee last year unilaterally cut teachers’ wages, forced teachers to pay more of their health insurance costs…

Central Falls: Tomorrow’s News Today

By Justin Katz | May 16, 2010 |

The press releases are coming out concerning an administration-union deal in Central Falls. First in the emailbox was the union’s take: The Central Falls Teachers Union and the Central Falls School District reached a tentative agreement Saturday to implement a transformation plan for Central Falls High School for the 2010-11 school year in a way…

Everything’s Negotiable in the Race to the Top

By Justin Katz | May 11, 2010 |

I’m not a fan of saying, “How high?,” when the federal government says, “jump,” and waves around a bunch of money. It’s also detrimental to begin seeing federal dollars as some sort of cost-free windfall. That said, the Race to the Top matter has brought forward the true face of labor unions and highlighted their…

“Do you have to love labor unions to be a good Democrat?”

By Marc Comtois | May 4, 2010 |

Blogger Mickey Kaus is running for U.S. senator in the Democratic primary in California and thinks its time for the Democratic Party to re-think their relationship with unions (h/t). It’s time for Democrats, even liberal Democrats, to start looking at unions and unionism with deep skepticism. I don’t mean we should embrace the right-wing view…

SNL: The 2010 Public Employee of the Year Awards

By Marc Comtois | April 27, 2010 |

The nominees: Markeesha Odom: Works at St. Louis DMV. At 24 years old, already twice name Missouri’s surliest and least cooperative state employee. Dennis Cosgrove: School custodian in Queens, NY. Set a record with 3200 hours on the job. All on overtime! Like many NYC custodians, Dennis is a year round resident of Florida. Anthony…

Making Committees Choose Between Funds and Friends

By Justin Katz | April 26, 2010 |

Chris Powell notes a strategy worth considering: Nominations for Connecticut’s mayor of the year should include Wallingford’s William W. Dickinson Jr. for proposing, in the town budget he recently submitted to the Town Council, to reduce the school board’s budget by exactly the amount the board planned to pay raises to teachers. The mayor thus…

Labor Peace, Town or State

By Justin Katz | April 26, 2010 | Comments Off on Labor Peace, Town or State

Julia Steiny makes a reasonable point about the ability of the General Assembly — with limits and mandates for local teacher contracts — to ensure “peace at the local level,” but her assessment doesn’t go quite far enough: And this is the point: labor peace must be bought. And nothing is excluded from negotiations. Everything…

Re: The Biggest Faction in the General Assembly

By Justin Katz | April 23, 2010 |

The comments to Marc’s post on the number of General Assembly members who benefit from public pensions are understandable, but most miss the point. Cutting the General Assembly’s pay and authority isn’t going to address the essential problem — namely, that an official position that doesn’t pay much will attract those who have other motivations,…

Union Comfort Would Be Evidence of Danger

By Justin Katz | April 17, 2010 |

My main argument against looking toward centralized levers — whether in Providence or Washington — to reform education has essentially been that national teachers’ unions are better situated to manipulate higher tiers of government than are concerned residents acting through democratic processes. Within the scope of town politics, an active group can have some hope…