Teacher Unions: Two Is Bad Enough, One Is Worse

Lieberman, Myron

Teacher Unions: Two Is Bad Enough, One Is Worse By Myron Lieberman The merger of the nation's two giant teacher unions is very likely to be approved at their national conventions in New Orleans...

...In most states, the work year for teachers is 180 days or less, and their work day is six to seven hours including lunch...
...As long as they remain outside the AFL-CIO, rival unions in the federation can threaten to raid their ranks...
...indeed, the Democrats often use teacher-union offices as their campaign headquarters...
...affiliation with the AFL-CIO would preclude this outcome...
...Their proposals to weaken teacher tenure, or institute merit pay, or authorize a few charter schools, illustrate the point: These are worthy but secondary objectives that merely drive more teachers into the arms of the NEA and AFT...
...A "Teacher Right To Know" law would receive substantial support from teachers and would help curb some of the worst abuses that currently prevail...
...It's an unpleasant prospect, but one that grows more likely every day...
...The NEA and AFT employ more than 6,000 people, over half of whom are paid $100,000 or more in salaries and benefits...
...Currently, hundreds of thousands of public employees are in independent unions...
...Meanwhile, legislation that would weaken the unions and would actually enjoy considerable teacher support is overlooked...
...Like any other consumers, teachers are better served if producers compete—if teachers can choose between rival unions...
...Although NEA and AFT membership figures include hundreds of thousands of retirees and others who pay minimal dues, a merger will probably lead to increased membership of full-time employees, not limited to teachers...
...while they may be active politically, their collective-bargaining operations are separate from their political activity...
...The merger will add to this critical mass and facilitate its strategic and tactical deployment...
...cratic party: One of every nine delegates to the Democratic national conventions that nominated the Clinton-Gore ticket in 1992 and 1996 was a member of the NEA or AFT, and former union staff members hold key positions in the Democratic party and the Clinton administration...
...The National Education Association and the American Federation of Teachers, after all, have so many similarities that their merger doesn't seem to change much...
...The reason is that the AFL-CIO operates under a no-raiding policy, which bars affiliates from attempting to organize members of other AFL-CIO affiliates...
...at least, that has been the experience in state and local mergers to date...
...Private-sector unions achieve concessions by exerting economic pressure on employers...
...Consider the sheer number of bodies and dollars involved...
...The merger presents a unique opportunity to persuade hundreds of thousands of teachers to leave the NEA/AFT—and join a more congenial union, if one existed...
...Public-sector unions will soon comprise over half of AFL-CIO membership...
...Like other would-be monopolists, NEA and AFT leaders loudly decry the destructive, wasteful effects of competition, though their protests are hardly credible...
...In addition, the two unions hold similar, if not identical, positions on economic and social issues as well as on education policy...
...For teacher unions, however, bargaining means pressing school boards and other elected officials for concessions...
...In political campaigns, few if any organizations can provide as much in-kind help as the teacher unions...
...Many teachers dislike the idea of affiliation with the AFL-CIO (the AFT has always belonged to the AFL-CIO, but the NEA is not a member...
...Rank-and-file members cannot find out how much the staff and officers of their own union receive in total compensation or whether conflicts of interest exist in the union's awarding of contracts...
...Conservatives should be working to create alternative representation for teachers...
...Furthermore, the merger will undoubtedly lead independent public-sector unions, such as the 170,000-member California School Employees Association, to affiliate with the AFL-CIO...
...But even more discouraging than the merger itself is the passivity with which conservatives are greeting it...
...Instead, they are playing into the hands of the teacher unions...
...It is important to underscore, in this context, that teacher unions, like public-sector unions generally, are political by their very nature...
...The union field representatives who negotiate contracts do not perform this activity year round...
...the distinction between bargaining and political activity disappears, and the entire organization is geared to political action...
...First, teachers are consumers of representational services...
...Both have been all-out supporters of the DemoMyrow Lieberman, senior research scholar at the Social Philosophy and Policy Center, Bowling Green State University, Bowling Green, Ohio, is the author of The Teacher Unions (Free Press, 1997...
...The upshot is that, not only will the newly merged teacher union dwarf others in the labor federation, but unions representing perhaps a million or more additional state and local public employees will also join...
...In fact, even on very conservative assumptions, the NEA and AFT employ more full-time political operatives than the Democratic and Republican parties combined...
...As for the effects on teachers, in some ways at least, teachers will be worse off as a result of the merger...
...To anyone concerned about union participation in the 1996 elections, I would say, You ain't seen nothin' yet...
...unions are producers of them...
...The combined entity, as yet unnamed, will be the largest union in the AFL-CIO and a powerful political player...
...they negotiate multi-year contracts, then devote themselves to their primary activity: politics...
...In the overwhelming majority of state capitals, the teacher unions, especially the NEA, are among the two or three most powerful interest groups...
...They do not seek to hold their officers accountable for the alleged waste, and in reality they haven't competed very hard for years...
...Currently, the two unions enroll about 3.2 million members, of whom about 2.6 million are regular classroom teachers...
...As matters stand, however, we are likely to see the emergence of a 4-million-member coalition of state and local public employees with a formidable anti-conservative presence in every political jurisdiction in the United States...
...That is one reason the merger agreement provides for affiliation with the AFL-CIO at the national level but does not compel state and local unions to affiliate...
...The unions' revenues at all levels exceed $1.3 billion (excluding their PAC funds, foundations, and special-purpose organizations...
...Teacher Unions: Two Is Bad Enough, One Is Worse By Myron Lieberman The merger of the nation's two giant teacher unions is very likely to be approved at their national conventions in New Orleans this July...
...Many teachers are put off (or would be if they knew about it) by the influence of the gay and lesbian caucuses in both unions, the NEA's ethnic and gender quotas, the overwhelming Democratic tilt of their PACs, and the lush compensation for union staff, to mention only a few issues that would make a less expensive union without these drawbacks attractive...
...For instance, the teacher unions are generally not required to meet the minimal reporting and disclosure standards that apply to private-sector unions...
...In fact, the merger, by making plain how much they have in common, should dispel the naive idea that the AFT is a good union, while the NEA are the bad guys...
...Yet the consequences are easy to underestimate...
...These unions are adamantly opposed to smaller government, lower taxes, privatization—any policy that limits government programs or expenditures...
...As a result, teachers tend to have more time than others for telephone banks, demonstrations, mailing lists, transportation to the polls, and the other nitty-gritty tasks of political campaigns...

Vol. 3 • March 1998 • No. 26


 
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