Labor

An Increase as “Savings” in Tiverton Contract

By Justin Katz | March 7, 2009 |

It so happened that, the week my letter about Tiverton officials’ relationship with the public unions appeared in the Sakonnet Times, the town council posted a “tentative agreement” with AFSCME Council 94, slated for ratification at Monday’s town council meeting. The coincidence led one commenter on the Sakonnet Times site to aver hypocrisy, on my…

Displacing the Tiverton Elite

By Justin Katz | March 6, 2009 |

I’ve got a letter in the current Sakonnet Times, responding to some discouraging observations at recent town meetings: To the editor: The self-presumed ruling class of Tiverton — in and out of office — has no governing ideas but to raise taxes in good times and bad while comfortably accepting that most of the town’s…

Scoring the State Labor Relations Board

By Justin Katz | March 5, 2009 |

The Ocean State Policy Research Institute has kicked off LRB Watch to track the wins with the State Labor Relations Board. Despite claims from certain quarters that the board is “management” heavy, OSPRI finds that labor has one 15 of 19 decisions since 2006. When it comes to matters that OSPRI classifies as “major” —…

Administering Results for Negotiations

By Justin Katz | February 27, 2009 |

It would go too far to speculate that this sort of thing is widespread: Statewide testing procedures were violated at Whiteknact Elementary School last October when at least 14 third graders were given extra time, the state Department of Education has concluded. And now school officials are looking into whether another violation occurred when the…

Contract Steps: A Tutorial

By Marc Comtois | February 25, 2009 |

When we here about 3% raises in union contracts, what does that mean? Seems obvious: people will make 3% more next year over this. But with union contracts, that’s not the case. In most union contracts with which I’m familiar, each position has a defined table of step increases based on years served. When we…

Science Education Breaks Through the Negotiation Firewall

By Justin Katz | February 24, 2009 |

It appears that the most recent of the their multiple weeks off during the school year mellowed Johnston science teachers with regard to the new program that had recently been announced as foiled: During their winter break, local science teachers changed their minds and decided to participate in a project to improve science education across…

Lombardi Beats the Path

By Justin Katz | February 23, 2009 |

In dealing with his town’s unions in series, North Providence Mayor Charles Lombardi is imparting a lesson: Mayor Charles A. Lombardi dismissed 20 town workers last night after their unions failed to meet a 7 p.m. deadline for accepting deep cuts in wages and benefits. In all, 10 municipal workers and 10 public works employees…

Avedisian Locks in… Savings?

By Justin Katz | February 21, 2009 |

Out of Warwick comes a “tentative agreement” with the municipal unions in which Mayor Scott Avedisian purports to have secured $10 million in savings between March 2009 and June 2012. The dollar amount is measured against the current contracts, expiring at the end of June, and an assumption that a subsequent contract covering the next…

A Warning-Response Disconnect in North Providence (for One)

By Justin Katz | February 21, 2009 |

North Providence Mayor Charles Lombardi has issued twenty layoff notices to public works and municipal employees that will go into effect unless their unions accept a five percent cut in salary and a fifteen percent health insurance contribution. The mayor’s had mixed results, thus far, with the police union coming up with $200,000 and the…

When Negotiating Season and Flat-Tire Season Coincide

By Justin Katz | February 21, 2009 |

In a comment to my post about Tiverton school officials’ ambiguous admission of intimidation by the National Education Association, Cranstoner Donald Botts relates the following anecdote: My take on their comments was that the union was attempting to use intimidation tactics against them, but they either were not intimidated or didn’t want to admit they…