Dear Colleague,
With a decision in the Janus v AFSCME case expected within
weeks, there is no shortage of opinions on how the world will change if
the Supreme Court comes down on the side of the plaintiff. The lawsuit,
which could make dues paying for public employees voluntary nationwide,
has the California punditry opining in vastly different directions.
Writer Tom Elias warns that the Janus decision “could change California
politics.”
If Janus wins, politics and civic life in California could change
dramatically. For decades, public employee unions have been a driving
force in this state's politics, financially and in providing campaign
manpower. They are one big reason for the Democratic dominance in
virtually all aspects of state government.
However, teacher union watchdog Mike Antonucci has a very different
take. He writes, “…those expecting large-scale changes in a post-Janus
world may be sorely disappointed. However, there may be individual
regions (he mentions Los Angeles and San Diego) and job categories that
are disproportionately weakened.”
To read the Elias piece, go to https://www.theunion.com/opinion/thomas-d-elias-janus-decision-could-change-california-politics/ Antonucci’s thoughts can be found here - http://laschoolreport.com/antonucci-where-will-the-effects-of-a-janus-ruling-fall-fastest-and-hardest/
Also, on the subject of unions and California, veteran Washington Post
writer Jay Mathews recently took the California Teachers Association to
task for playing it fast and loose with the truth. “Maybe this teachers
union needs a crash course in truth in advertising” takes the union to
task for running a radio ad that is somewhat less than honest. Part of
the spot claims,
They’re lining up against our local public schools. One after
another, out-of-state billionaires are trying to buy our politicians.
Following the lead of Donald Trump and Betsy DeVos, billionaires like
Koch brothers allies Jim and Alice Walton have their own narrow
education agenda to divert money out of our public schools and into
their corporate charter schools. It’s true. Out-of-state billionaires
investing millions into politicians who will protect corporate-run
charter schools that lack accountability.
To read Mathews’ piece, go here - https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/education/maybe-these-teachers-need-to-take-a-crash-course-in-truth-in-advertising/2018/04/29/97578000-49df-11e8-827e-190efaf1f1ee_story.html?utm_term=.0566f761da69 To listen to the CTA ad, go to https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YCagrWqUhd4
The above CTA ad is an attempt to discredit Marshall Tuck who is running
against Tony Thurmond for State Superintendent of Public Instruction.
In a pitch for union members to tune in to a tele-townhall on May 9th,
the union’s website claims, “… corporate billionaires are pouring
millions into the races of candidates who share their agenda to divert
funding away from neighborhood public schools to privately-run charter
schools.”
In fact, Tuck is adamantly opposed to privately run charters and has
stated so many times, claiming, “Profit has no place in our public
schools….”
To see CTA’s page on the SPI race, go to http://view.cta-mailings.org/?qs=f1861e9d778baf4d02396bc9e03d43dc8a037c12f221f242ce210083da06c5208a67a5c33aaa0a0359c9a2cbeb6b92265ba6f6082de1e156f3f0f769e772239578f4c4162a93c1cbb788452e9aa6c746
To read what Tuck has to say on charters, go here - http://laschoolreport.com/marshall-tuck-support-nonprofit-charter-schools-ban-for-profit-charters/
Also, CTA’s actions notwithstanding, “Charter schools are booming in California” as the Sacramento Bee headline reads.
California’s charter school enrollment continues to skyrocket,
growing by more than 25,000 students during each of the past 10 years.
Almost 630,000 students attended California public charter schools
at the start of this school year — about one in every 10 students,
according to new data from the California Department of Education.
California charter school enrollment has increased 150 percent in the
last 10 years.
To learn more and see where charter school growth has been the most dramatic, go here - http://www.sacbee.com/news/local/education/article208863954.html
In recent days, the news has been filled with stories about teachers’
strikes, which have been widespread in West Virginia, Oklahoma,
Colorado, Kentucky, and Arizona. AFT President Randi Weingarten claims
“Teachers rising up in rebellion of everyday heroes” in which she
writes,
Teachers are standing up for their students and themselves against
largely red states with weak labor laws and where governors and
legislators have opted for tax cuts for the wealthy instead of
investments for children. This has left education conditions deplorable
and educators pauperized.
However, writing in City Journal, Jason Richwine and Andrew Biggs have a different take. In “No, Teachers Are Not Underpaid,” they write,
Contrary to myth, teachers are generally not foregoing higher
salaries by staying in the classroom. Data from the Survey of Income and
Program Participation show that teachers who change to non-teaching
jobs take an average salary cut of about 3 percent. Studies using
administrative records in Florida, Missouri, Georgia, and Montana showed
similar results; the Georgia study found “strong evidence that very few
of those who leave teaching take jobs that pay more than their salary
as teachers.”
To read the two very different points of view, go here - https://www.usatoday.com/story/opinion/2018/04/16/education-oklahoman-west-virginia-teachers-walkout-column/518686002/ and https://www.city-journal.org/html/no-teachers-are-not-underpaid-15867.html
On the subject of teacher pay, researcher and economics professor
Benjamin Scafidi found that between 1950 and 2015, the number of
teachers increased about 2.5 times faster than the uptick in students.
Also, the hiring of other education employees – administrators, teacher
aides, counselors, social workers, etc. – rose more than 7 times the
increase in students. Scafidi adds that despite the staffing surge,
students’ academic achievement has stagnated or even fallen over the
past several decades. Scafidi also has written that instead of this
wasteful spending, had non-teaching personnel growth been in line with
student growth, and the teaching force had risen “only” 1.5 times as
fast as student growth, our schools would have had an additional $37.2
billion to spend. He asserts that we could have raised every public
school teacher’s salary by more than $11,700 per year, given families of
each child in poverty more than $2,600 in cash per child to attend the
private school of his or her parents’ choice, more than doubled taxpayer
funding for early childhood education, etc.
To read more about the “staffing surge,” go to https://www.edchoice.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/07/11-2012-Staffing-Surge-WEB.pdf and https://www.edchoice.org/research/back-staffing-surge/
Senate Bill 1150 has been introduced in Oklahoma, which would “require
that a majority of educators in the district vote every five years to
keep their collective bargaining unit. More than half of the eligible
employees would have to cast a ballot for the union for it to gain
recognition in the district. If not, the entire school district would
lose union representation.” The bill would also prevent school districts
from deducting union dues from teacher paychecks. Instead, teachers
would have to make arrangements with their union to pay their dues.
To read more about SB 1150 go to http://newsok.com/bill-is-revenge-for-teacher-walkout-unions-say/article/5593286
The online Western Governors University (WGU) is offering 100
scholarships to current and aspiring teachers and school administrators
seeking a bachelor’s or master’s degree in education. The school’s press
release, in part, reads,
In recognition of Teacher Appreciation Week, Western Governors
University (WGU) is offering 100 scholarships to current and aspiring
teachers, and school administrators, seeking a bachelor’s or master’s
degree in education. WGU is also waiving the $65 application fee for
prospective students who apply to a Teachers College degree program by
June 30 using the code: NOWFREE.
Each WGU Teacher Appreciation Scholarship is valued at up to
$2,000—$500 per six-month term for up to four terms. New students can
apply for these scholarships now through June 30 at
www.wgu.edu/teacherappreciation. To be eligible, scholarship applicants
must be officially admitted to WGU, complete the scholarship
application, and be interviewed by a WGU scholarship counselor. While
WGU will award up to 100 scholarships, recipients will be selected based
on academic records, financial need, readiness for online study, and
current competency, among other considerations.
To learn more about the scholarship and apply, go to www.wgu.edu/landing/teachersweek18
And finally, as you well know, data and solid information are very
useful in scoring political points and making cases for various causes.
To that end, CTEN has a “cheat sheet,” which has been updated on our
website – all with original sources. To see it, go to http://www.ctenhome.org/cheatsheet.html
If you have information that counters what’s there or would like to see
something added, please let us know. As always, thanks for your
continuing interest and support.
Sincerely,
Larry Sand
CTEN President
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