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Showing posts with label Teachers' Union. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Teachers' Union. Show all posts

Monday, June 8, 2009

Shady Dealings: School Teachers Deserve Union Transparency


From The Heritage Foundation
By James Sherk and Dan Lips

Teachers in the Hoosier State recently learned that the Indiana State Teachers Association’s (ISTA’s) Insurance Trust has effectively gone bankrupt. Regulators revealed that the trust, which pays benefits for disabled teachers, owes $86 million in liabilities and has only $19 million in assets. The FBI has begun investigating.

Much of the portfolio’s value apparently vanished in high-risk investments. The investment broker managing the trust made 4,000 trades over a nine-month period, perhaps motivated by the 50 percent hike in commissions on trades that ISTA’s executive director, Warren Williams, authorized.

As investigators sort out responsibility, school districts and the state government are examining what the fund’s shortfall will mean for teachers and taxpayers, who could be on the hook for a bailout to ensure that teachers are insured. Williams has resigned, and the National Education Association announced that it has taken over the Indiana State Teachers Association.

The insurance-fund crisis demonstrates the importance of transparency. Union members deserve to know how their unions spend their money so they can hold the unions accountable. As insurance commissioner Dan Clark argued: “They need to open their books. We don’t think ISTA membership is aware of how serious this situation is, and we don’t even know how well-informed their board is.”

Sunlight protects against corruption and unethical practices. Congress passed the Labor Management Reporting and Disclosure Act (LMRDA) in the wake of scandals in the 1950s involving ties between organized labor and organized crime. Congress believed that workers had a right to know how their unions spent their dues. Lawmakers hoped that transparency would discourage kickbacks to the mob.

For over 40 years, however, the Department of Labor barely enforced the law. The disclosure forms allowed unions to list multimillion-dollar line items for “other” and “miscellaneous” expenses with no further details. In practice, the law did nothing to hold unions accountable.

Elaine Chao, President Bush’s labor secretary, made changing that a priority. Her Labor Department enacted reforms that required unions to itemize their expenses and meaningfully disclose their finances. By the end of her tenure, Secretary Chao (who now works with us as a distinguished fellow at the Heritage Foundation) had updated the LM-2 union financial disclosure form, the LM-30 conflict-of-interest-reporting form, and the T-1 forms for union trusts.

These reforms have already borne fruit. Investigative reporters examining the revised LM-2 forms found serious corruption in the Service Employees International Union (SEIU). The president of the Los Angeles local, Tyrone Freeman, stepped down after reporters found that it had paid hundreds of thousands of dollars to companies owned by Freeman’s family members, for little apparent benefit. Annelle Grajeda, the executive vice president of the national SEIU, stepped down after investigations revealed that the union had paid her boyfriend tens of thousands of dollars.

Organized labor fought these transparency measures every step of the way. The Alabama Education Association and 31 other state teachers unions — including the Indiana State Education Association — filed suit against the Department of Labor, contending that the government should exempt them from disclosure. After several rounds in court, they lost — but not before delaying the implementation of the reforms by several years.

In hindsight, it’s clear why the now-former head of ISTA opposed increasing union transparency. While the regulations that the union leadership attempted to block didn’t apply to the Insurance Trust, how likely is it that this was the only incident of fraud or mismanagement in ISTA? Transparency and accountability protect union members from abuses of power by those who should represent them.

Unfortunately, the Obama administration is moving in the other direction — undoing Secretary Chao’s transparency reforms at the behest of organized labor. High on the AFL-CIO’s transition wish list was rolling back the new union disclosure requirements. And Obama has delivered.

The Labor Department has begun rescinding the revised LM-2 disclosure forms and has announced it won’t enforce the new conflict-of-interest reporting requirements. The Obama administration is also widely expected to begin the process of rescinding the union-trust reporting requirements this fall — well before unions would have to file the first forms next year. The Labor Department seems intent on ensuring that union members know as little about how their union spends their money as possible.

President Obama wants greater transparency from businesses, banks, the government — everyone except the union movement. This clearly benefits the union leaders, who will become less accountable to their members. But it’s hardly the change Obama promised to bring to Washington.


James Sherk is the Bradley Fellow in Labor Policy, and Dan Lips is a Senior Policy Analyst at the Heritage Foundation.

(This article first appeared in National Review Online.)



Wednesday, November 26, 2008

Democrat Education PAC Challenges Unions' Stranglehold



Albert Shanker, the legendary former leader of the American Federation of Teachers, famously stated that he would represent the interests of students when children begin paying union dues. And for decades the Democrat Party has championed the interests of education providers - teacher tenure, curricula light on content but heavy on liberal, social indoctrination, union contracts that pay the good and the unqualified equally and free teachers from accountability for results.

Now Democrats like Senator Mary Landrieu, New York Governor David Patterson, and Newark Mayor Cory Booker are beginning to challenge the unions' stranglehold on their party. A new PAC is giving voice to the less organized but traditional Democrat Party constituency groups that actually care about students and their academic success. Education Week reports the David vs. Goliath story:


Democrat Education PAC Hopes for Its Moment Under Obama

By Alyson Klein

For years, the teachers’ unions were the key players in the political money game to help further education policy objectives.

But since its inception in 2005, Democrats for Education Reform, a political action committee based in New York City, has sought to use campaign donations to smooth the way for policies such as expanding charter schools and differential pay for teachers that are sometimes opposed by traditional Democratic constituencies.

Now the group, which helped raise about $2 million for Democratic candidates for president, Congress, and state offices during this year’s elections, is seeking to put its stamp on the presidential transition, suggesting legislative priorities, and floating potential hires for core education positions.

Read the rest of this entry >>

Friday, October 10, 2008

UK's Largest Teachers' Union Lobbies to Legalize Sex with Students


How long do you think it will be before the NEA is pushing this?

By Hilary White

LONDON, October 9, 2008 (LifeSiteNews.com) - The largest UK teachers' union wants the government to decriminalize sex with students who are over the legal age of consent. Chris Keates, the general secretary of the National Association of Schoolmasters Union of Women Teachers (NASUWT), said that teachers who have sex with pupils over the age of consent should not be placed on the sex offenders register. Keates called prosecution for statutory rape "a real anomaly in the law that we are concerned about."

NASUWT complained that media reports had misrepresented their position. "To describe the NASUWT's comments on this as 'teachers want the right to bed pupils' as one report has done, simply for pointing out an anomaly which criminalises a teacher but would leave any other adult free from prosecution for the same type of relationship, is a travesty."

Gregory Carlin, however, a child protection activist and head of the Irish Anti-Trafficking Coalition, said that such ideas were another sign of the erosion of legal protections for young people against exploitation.

"If the NASUWT philosophy has its day," he said, "exploiting a 16 year old in a brothel would carry no extra penalty." Under the same logic, he said, "Jail guards would be able to take their pick from their charges and foster parents would be spared prosecution for having sex with foster children."

In an official statement dated October 6th, Keates said, "From the time the Sexual Offences legislation was first drafted in 2001 the NASUWT consistently raised the significant anomaly within its provisions. A teacher having a consensual relationship with a pupil over the age of 16 on the roll of the school in which they teach is liable under the Act to prosecution and being placed on the sex offenders register.

"However, if the same teacher has a consensual relationship with a young person of the same age who attends another school they would not be prosecuted or classed as sex offenders."

Carlin told LifeSiteNews.com that Keates "knows what she was asking for," which is simply to "legalise sex crimes."

List 99 is a secret register of men and women who are barred from working with children by the Department of Education and Skills. Carlin said, "Thousands of teachers are referred to List 99 each year, most of them from the NASUWT. In fact, the referrals doubled between 2003 and 2005."