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FROM THE EDITORS: Let the Public In
By Paul E. Peterson
How Closed Negotiations with Unions Are Hurting Our Schools
The federal No Child Left Behind law
has helped open school performance to unprecedented public
scrutiny. Now it is time to bring equal transparency to the
collective bargaining process.
In one of several essays in this issue
addressing relations between unions and school boards, George
Mitchell and Howard Fuller (“A Culture of Complaint,”
page 18) propose that bargaining be subject to the same sunshine
laws that apply to other public business. And, in fact, in Salem,
Oregon, to prevent a renewal of charges of bargaining in bad faith
that both sides leveled at each other the previous year, that idea
is now being tried.
But most everywhere else, the public is shut
out of the conversation. Only when strikes occur do people glimpse
what is going on. And strikes occur less often now than ever
before. In 1975, when teacher unions were just getting themselves
into the collective bargaining game, teacher labor disputes
nationwide numbered 241. In 2004 that number was no more than 15.
Don’t be misled. Strikes have not
decreased in number because the unions are now docile, but because,
apart from excessive salary demands, they have grown accustomed to
getting nearly everything they want at the bargaining table. And
school boards are accustomed to giving it to them.
Even after the negotiations are done, the
agreement, supposedly a public document, can be tough to get a look
at. Our office thrice asked New York City’s Department of
Education for a copy of the current contract, only to be directed
each time to the union, which eventually mailed one to us. As a
public service, we direct readers to the contract posted on the
union’s website (http://www.uft.org/member/rights/contracts/current_teachers_contract/), buried far from both
Google’s and the union’s own search reaches.
New York City is one of the more accessible
education redoubts. In more typical cases, school boards and local
school administrators simply refuse to make the contract available.
Even then, however, making sense of these mammoth documents is almost impossible for citizens who are not trained
labor lawyers, which is why hearings on the New York City contract held
by New York City councilwoman Eva Moskowitz were so important.
In politics, the insiders usually win the
battles, and so it is with collective bargaining. Nationwide,
weekly pay for teachers exceeds that of computer programmers,
registered nurses, social workers, and lab technicians.
Teachers’ health-care and pension benefits are well above
average.
If these provisions are beneficial to union
members, other contract terms have clear, adverse consequences for
the education of students. Agreements typically require that the
worst teachers be paid the same as the best (since pay
differentials are based on credentials and experience, not merit).
They usually prevent principals from removing ineffective teachers
without working through prolonged, tedious, arcane procedures. And
the featherbedding that has been all but abolished from private
industry continues within big-city school systems.
Unions make no apology for this unhappy state
of affairs. “The fundamental and legitimate purposes of
unions [are] to protect the employment interests of their
members,” says one former Ohio union official.
His point is well taken. It’s the school
board’s responsibility to bargain with at least as much
firmness as those across the table. Unfortunately, most boards are
negotiating wimps, too influenced by their need to win their own
reelection and keep peace in the community.
Most of all, boards hate the publicity that
comes with a strike, for then they must explain to irked parents
why their children are not in school. It’s easier to take the
broad, easy road than the narrow, conflict-ridden one.
Some say open negotiations will make it harder
for union leaders to make concessions. Perhaps. But at least they
would give the public a chance to know what’s going on.
— Paul E. Peterson
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