Unions have been respected in America forever, and public employee unions have reaped that respect. There are two great reasons for this. One is that unions always stood for the little guy. The other is that Americans like balance. We have management over here and the union over here, they'll talk and find balance, it'll turn out fine.
But with the public employee unions, the balance has been off for decades. And when they lost their balance they fell off their pedestal.
When union leaders negotiate with a politician, they're negotiating with someone they can hire and fire. Public unions have numbers and money, and politicians need both. And politicians fear strikes because the public hates them. When governors negotiate with unions, it's not collective bargaining, it's more like collusion. Someone said last week the taxpayers aren't at the table. The taxpayers aren't even in the room.
As for unions looking out for the little guy, that's not how it's looking right now. Right now the little guy is the public school pupil whose daily rounds take him from a neglectful family to an indifferent teacher who can't be removed. The little guy is the beleaguered administrator whose attempts at improvement are thwarted by unions. The little guy is the private-sector worker who doesn't have a good health-care plan, who barely has a pension, who lacks job security, and who is paying everyone else's bills.
This is a major perceptual change. In my lifetime, people have felt so supportive of unions. That great scene in the 1979 film "Norma Rae," in which the North Carolina cotton mill worker played by Sally Field holds up the sign that says UNION—people were moved by that scene because they believed in its underlying justice. When I was a child, kids bragged if their father had a union job because it meant he was part of something, someone was looking out for him, he was a citizen.
There were hiccups—the labor racketeering scandals of the 1950s, Jimmy Hoffa and the Teamsters. But they served as a corrective to romanticism. Men in groups will be men in groups, whether they run a government or a union. Budd Schulberg and Elia Kazan captured this in their 1954 masterpiece, "On the Waterfront," in which Terry Malloy, played by Marlon Brando, stands up to the selfish, bullying union chief Johnny Friendly. Brando's character testifies to the Waterfront Commission and then defiantly stands down Johnny and his goons. "I'm glad what I done today. . . . You hear me? Glad what I done."
We're at quite a moment when public employee unions remind you of Johnny Friendly. They're so powerful, such a base of the Democratic Party, and they must think nothing can hurt them. But they can hurt themselves. And they are. Are they noticing?
____________________________________
Bedford Central School District - Financial Assumptions Board Presentation Tax Increases Close to 6% if nothing is cut:
Download Presentation
Recent Speech by BCSD School Board member:
____________________________________
“District employment contracts do not enable us to keep combined wage and benefits increases to 3% or less per year. If we cannot keep increases to such a supportable level, we must draw down reserves or let go of more teachers and programs or do both. Therefore, once prudent reserves are exhausted, our district will have to make annual staff cuts just to pay teachers for staying on for one more year.
What can we do? Today, we can do nothing without the help of the BTA. I encourage the teachers to help the BTA reinvent itself. I would like to see the BTA become a champion of public service instead of primarily a defender of the current salary and benefits of its own, more senior members. Instead of demonstrating endless obsession with wages and conditions in a contract that exceeds 100 pages, I challenge the BTA to be a force of change to improve the quality of education in our schools. We can no longer afford to reward failure and laud mediocrity."
Graham Anderson
_______________________________________
Ways to Get the Finances of NY School Districts and Taxes Under Control
"Unsustainable" is the mantra heard throughout the state (and the country) from economists, residents, taxpayers and politicians - not by the unions, regarding continued tax increases & the cost of education (and municipal services.)
Here is the new reality…
Cuomo on a Collision Course With Unions by Michael Barbaro, New York Times, November 3, 2010
“The state is broke, and the era of gold-plated labor contracts is over. There is a crisis. You (unions) need to rise to the crisis. The salaries and benefits are unsustainable.”
“His policy positions are not aligned with ours,” said Richard C. Iannuzzi, president of New York State United Teachers, which declined to endorse Mr. Cuomo.
So, here is a layman's take on what should be done to bring union contracts into the 21st century and provide some sanity and reality to taxes and the cost of education.
Ways to get the financial disaster under control: (*) = under control of state legislature, based on my understanding.
1.* Significantly reduce unfunded state mandates on the districts
2. *Move from defined benefit pension to 401k-type plan
3. *Require all retirees in the state system to pay NY State and municipal (NYC, etc.) income taxes
4. *With the current defined benefit pension - calculate the pension based only on base salary - no OT or stipends.
5. *Significantly increase the amount that employees pay into the pension program
6. *Stop any health care benefits to current retirees when they reach 65 - let them use Medicare - just like the real world. Do not reimburse for any Medicare costs.
7. *Move the retirement age to 65. You can stop working before 65 but must wait until 65 to collect. (25 years ago I left AMF and my pension was vested. I will start collecting the pension, as modest as it is, on May 1 of this year - I turn 65 in April.)
8. *Eliminate tenure as we know it. Have renewable contracts ? perhaps four years.
8a. *Repeal The Triborough Amendment which is an amendment to the Taylor Law which prevents effective collective bargaining by requiring public employers to continue the provisions of a contract that has expired, until a new one has been reached. It creates low incentives for the unions to give concessions or engage in collective bargaining in good faith. We are the only state that has such a requirement for public employers.
9. Stop accumulating sick pay and personal time to be paid upon retirement or leaving ? use it or lose it. Period. End of story. Just like the real world. Do it!
10. Eliminate discounted tuition for children of out of district teachers. No grandfathering.
Why should taxpayers subsidize this?
The developers of the Reader's Digest property in Pleasantville are required to use the full cost per student when they calculate how many school-age children are predicted to live in the residential development. They tried to use the fixed costs but the lawyers and the BOE required the total cost of approximately $27,000.
11. Eliminate stipend payments for duties that should be part of teachers' routines: proctoring, committees, mentoring and many more.
12. Do not pay extra for education credits beyond a masters.
13. Do not pay automatic separate stipends for “longevity” or “tiers” or add on to stipend payments due to longevity.
14. Do not pay annual increases. All increases must be earned via performance other than COL and the COL must be tied to the government calculation; the same metric that Social Security uses to determine annual increase - BTW, SS payments have remained flat for three years!
15. Increase class size - not sure how much. But all relevant research (not research by the teacher's union) discounts the idea that class size is a critical variable. Also - see Gates below. Do not pay teachers more for teaching larger classes.
16. Carefully review all sports, extra-curricular, clubs, etc - and trim offerings. The schools cannot be all things to all people as in the past. Do less and do it better.
17. Any increases in costs related to teachers and staff must be counter-balanced with concessions, cost reduction or efficiency improvement by the teachers and staff. This is not a spectator sport; teachers and staff must be part of the solution and not be allowed to sit on the sidelines while taxpayers and students suffer. Remember, for the last several years virtually none of the school tax increases went to programs for the students - all went to pensions, health care and salaries and other benefits for teachers and staff.
18. Significantly increase the amount the school staff pays into their health insurance plan
The school district and village must not raise taxes one penny - taxes should be lowered.
-the federal taxes are not being increased - the reductions will continue
-the state taxes are not being increased - a reduction is in the works
-the county taxes are being reduced
-the Town of Rye taxes are being reduced by about 15% (Joe Garvin, Town of Rye Supervisor ? gets it! To paraphrase ? run the town as efficiently as a business is run!)
-this is the second year of no increase in SS ? never happened before. Three years at the same payment rate.
-the military is getting a 1.4% salary increase - the lowest since 1962.
-the federal employees are headed to a two year salary freeze
Sam Marcus
Rye Brook
5
Fact sheet on the 2011 Astorino Budget Proposal
Gov. Christie explains the problem with the Teacher's Union - watch video - Great Stuff
Mort Zuckerman - The Bankrupting of America - Union Pensions are the issue
Westchester Magazine article - Why are our Taxes so High
Empire at Risk - USA
"Commission For Tax Relief" for the summary report - click here
Bedford Central School District highlighted in Wall Street Journal Article
Westchester has the Highest Real Estate Taxes in the nation - Read the Governor's report here
Special Ed and Taxes from the Governor's Commission
Read about the cost to our state from mandates and other issues - written by the NYS School Boards Assoc. - Great Read
NY Times article about teachers taking cuts all around NY - but not in Bedford
Forbes.Com Article on Westchester -
Where Americans Pay Most In Property Taxes
NYC Wants 2% Raise
Suburban Teachers Take Pay Cuts
7 Jobs, 3010 Applicants
Test Scores Now Linked to Teacher Firings
Union Starts to Endorse Candidates
Long Island Teachers' Union OKs Pay Cuts
The Teachers' Unions' Last Stand
Governor Christie (NJ) Combats NJ Teachers
Board-Teacher Talks are Revealed to Public
Public Pensions Headed for Disaster
Lessons of Cash Grab
Teacher Pension Nightmare
Trillion-Dollar Pension Crisis
NYS Blueprint for a Better Budget - Jan. 2010
Pols Turn on Labor Unions
____________________________________