Union
Seniority Rules Can Result in Terminating Top Teachers
While
the final outcome for Chryselle Angderson, a popular stringed instruments
teacher at Helen Morgan School in Sparta, New Jersey, ended well, she was among
the 17 Sparta school district personnel members who were to have their
positions eliminated for the 2016-17 budget year. The cuts were to include two high school and five
elementary school teachers based on their seniority rather than their
merit. At the March Board of Education meeting, Ms. Angderson, in particular, received outstanding
praise and support from parents and students. She even received a standing ovation and some
students held up their instruments to show their support for her. [See: Amy
Bate, “Full house at Sparta BOE meeting,” Sparta Independent, 3/17/16, http://www.spartaindependent.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20160317/NEWS01/160319974/Full-house-at-Sparta-BOE-meeting#sthash.ORD8xDJj.dpuf ]. It is clear that Ms. Angderson had the merit,
but she didn’t have the seniority.
Brian
Stities, a parent, said that Ms. Angderson has “the rare combination of
expertise…, love of teaching and the ability to motivate….” [See: Joseph Picard, “Community
rallied to keep beloved music teacher,” Sparta Independent, 5/5-11/16,
p.1. A petition drive to keep Ms.
Angderson obtained some 600 signatures. Id.
at p.2.]
Ironically,
just before the April BOE meeting Ms. Angderson was notified that she would not
be let go. The district also found a way
to keep a World Language teacher. The
School Administration said the decision to keep Ms. Angderson had nothing to do
with the petition, public outcry and support for Ms. Angderson, but the
decision was due to a sudden retirement of a music teacher. However, there are some who feel the petition
and the public support helped the BOE make the decision. Id. at p.2. The rest of
the seniority-based laid off members of the district staff were not so
fortunate.
A similar case in Wisconsin also ended
well for at least one outstanding teacher.
In June 2010, Wisconsin Council of Teachers of English named Megan
Sampson the outstanding first-year teacher. However, in the same month she was among 482
educators who received their layoff notices from Milwaukee Public Schools (MPS). [See: Erin Richards and Amy Hetzner, “Seniority system
cuts fresh MPS teachers amid budget crunch” Journal Sentinel, 6/14/2010, http://www.jsonline.com/news/education/96349689.html ].
Due to the Milwaukee Teachers’
Education Association (“MTEA”) contract and the MTEA’s monopoly negotiating
power, the MPS had to lay off teachers strictly based on seniority, even though
the MPS had offered to save teacher jobs by encouraging switching medical
insurance coverage. At the time the MPS offered its teachers the option of two
generous health-care plans. The cost of either plan was covered in full by the
MPS, meaning teachers had no financial incentive to switch from the higher-cost
Aetna plan to a lower-cost United Health Care plan. Id.
Michael Bonds, Milwaukee School Board
President, said that if all of the teachers switched to the United Health Care
plan the MPS could have saved $48 million, enough to save the jobs of 480
teachers. Some of the teachers expressed
frustration that the Union had not contacted them (the people the Union claims
to represent) about switching health care plans to save teachers jobs. Id.
However, analogous to Chryselle
Angderson, Megan Sampson, who had taught English at the Bradley Tech High
School in the MPS for the 2009-10 school year, was able to quickly obtain a new
teaching position. After applying to
various other schools, she accepted a position teaching English at Wauwatosa
East High School, starting in the fall of 2010.
Meanwhile, due to numerous resignations and additional funding, MPS
“called back” Ms. Sampson, but she decided to continue in her new position at
Wauwatosa East. [See: James B. Nelson, “Gov. Scott
Walker says Wisconsin’s ‘teacher of the year’ was laid off due to union
contract,” POLITIFACT WISCONSIN, http://www.politifact.com/wisconsin/statements/2015/feb/16/scott-walker/gov-scott-walker-says-wisconsins-teacher-year-was-/].
Governor Scott Walker has used the
Megan Sampson case as a reason why his Act 10 was needed. Act 10 allowed school districts to avoid the
strict use of seniority for layoffs. In addition, among other things, Act 10 allows
school districts to put their health insurance contracts out to bid, and obtain
multiple competitive bids, rather than being forced to use the teachers’
union’s WEA Trust insurance. Id. The bidding process allowed school districts
to save tens of millions of dollars and even hire more teachers.
In one case, as reported by The
Ozaukee Press, because Port Washington, Wisconsin became able to shop for
insurance, the WEA Trust lowered its proposed premium for the following year
from an 8% increase to a 3.3% decrease.
However, two other insurance companies offered Port Washington a 7% decrease
and a savings of a million dollars. [See: Scott Walker, Unintimidated,
p. 142.]
The Appleton, Wisconsin school
district was able to save $3.1 million on the same health insurance from the
WEA Trust, just because the school district was able to put its insurance out
for competitive bids as permitted under Act 10.
Id. at 143. Due to Act 10, Muskego-Norway school district
was able to cut its health insurance by $2 million by switching to United Health
from the Union controlled WEA Trust. Id. Dozens of other
school districts across Wisconsin had similar experiences for a state wide
total of $91 million in savings or 24%. Id.
In Madison, where most of the Union
protests took place, Act 10 reforms permitted the school district to avoid
teacher layoffs, open a new middle school, start a kindergarten program for
four-year olds and give teachers raises.
Id. at 144. In fact, across the state there was a net
increase of 1,213 in teachers in the year after Act 10 was enacted. Id. at 145.
However, the union-controlled school
boards in Milwaukee, Kenosha and Janesville rushed to lock in long-term
teachers’ union contracts while Act 10 was still being debated and were forced
to lay off 800 teachers, because they were unable to take advantage of Act 10
until those contracts expired. Id. This means that the rest of the state
actually added over two thousand teachers.
Another
example of union action being detrimental to the teachers
took
place in Ohio. There a union referendum
was able to repeal Ohio’s new Right-To-Work (RTW) Law before it took effect, by
flooding the airwaves with misleading ads claiming Ohio’s new RTW Law would
lead to massive layoffs of teachers.
In
reality, the public sector layoffs in Ohio were much worse than they would have
been had the law not been repealed. The
law did not reduce the money spent, but only permitted more prudent allocation
of the money. Furthermore, the Ohio
layoffs were much worse than those that occurred anywhere in Wisconsin, where
Act 10 survived union challenges. For
example, the Cleveland School Board laid off 17% of the district’s school
teachers in April 2012. [See: “Government
Union Lobby Remains Formidable,” NATIONAL RIGHT TO WORK NEWLETTER (NRWN),
July 2012, p. 3.]
Analyzing
these examples raises the question whether certain provisions in the teachers’
union contracts, such as seniority rather than merit determining promotions and
layoffs or full monopoly bargaining power affecting some of the costs such as
health insurance, actually help the teachers or are detrimental to the
teachers, the students, the parents, the school system and the taxpayers.
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