Labor

Problem Teacher Had Won Arbitration

By Marc Comtois | September 29, 2009 |

Setting aside the question of why on earth is this woman teaching 7 year olds…. [Kathleen] Borgia arrested shortly after 9 a.m., after a police officer working a construction detail Monday morning noticed a white Mustang swerving in traffic and a witness called the police to report a white Mustang traveling erratically on Hope Street,…

The Public Sector Can’t Have It All

By Justin Katz | September 28, 2009 |

Comment-section conversation to the previous post, and to the prior post on the same op-ed, brings to mind the basic philosophical problem with public-sector labor, these days. It was once cliché to think of government jobs as akin to government bonds. The work (or the investment) isn’t going to make one rich, but it is…

Council 94 Leadership Rediscovers Democracy – Membership of Largest State Union to Vote on Gov’s Proposal

By Monique Chartier | September 25, 2009 |

After huddling up in North Providence for a couple of hours this afternoon and listening to an explanation by a couple of HR people from the state of certain nuances of the proposal, the ProJo reports that The leaders of the largest state employees union reversed course Friday afternoon and agreed to let their members…

“Random Job Reassignment”

By Marc Comtois | September 24, 2009 |

Council 94 now says they’ll accept the Governor’s proposal if he agrees to remove the “random job reassignment” provisions. “We will move this proposal to an immediate vote of our full membership as soon as the Governor removes the one provision that has nothing to do with the state’s budget.” “Council 94 is willing to…

Anti-Democratic Council 94 Rejects Governor’s Offer

By Marc Comtois | September 24, 2009 |

The ProJo reports on the decision by Council 94 to reject Governor Carcieri’s cost-saving deal, while other unions approved it. The Journal quotes Council 94’s acting executive director Joseph Peckham as saying the 11 to 7 (or 6?) vote as “not even close.” Ooookay. Peckham said he, Downey and Council 94 vice president Jonathan Braddock…

Did the Governor Just Set a Time Bomb?

By Justin Katz | September 23, 2009 |

Just out from the governor’s office: Today, Governor Donald L. Carcieri and several state employee labor unions, including the RI Alliance of Social Service Employees (Local 580), RI Laborers’ District Council Locals 808 and 1033 (LIUNA), the RI Parole and Probation Associates (RIPPA), and the RI Employment Security Alliance (Local 401 SEIU), announced that a…

Performance Pay Doesn’t Mean Cut-Throat Workplace

By Justin Katz | September 22, 2009 |

Dan Yorke has been talking about the East Providence school administration’s push for a pay-for-performance system for teachers, and one teacher from the district called in from her house in Barrington to explain that that sort of pay schedule doesn’t work in her profession. Teaching is cooperative, you see, meaning that unlike other professions (apparently)…

A Different (and Less Effective) Way of Doing Business

By Justin Katz | September 22, 2009 |

I share Julia Steiny’s aversion to teacher “bumping,” of course, but her weekend column brings out the downright philosophical difference that exists in public education, as distinct from private-sector work: A single regulation from the state, effective the moment each contract expires, would allow schools to get the best teachers they can, when vacancies occur.…

Union and Democrat Party, Speaking with One Voice

By Justin Katz | September 22, 2009 |

This past weekend’s episode of Newsmakers, with AFL-CIO RI President George Nee, is worth a watch: Nee is among the more reasonable-sounding of the labor representatives, but that presentation only emphasizes the absence of space between how he responds to questions and how any given Democrat partisan would answer them. Sure, he’s the guy who…

The Importance of Putting Food on the Table Feelings

By Justin Katz | September 19, 2009 |

As I prepare for the first of a bunch of working Saturdays undertaken out of dire financial need, I bring the words of RI School for the Deaf Occupational Therapist Meg Denton with me to ponder: Today I was determined to be a “nonessential” state employee. I was told that I am required to accept…