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01-01-2001 12:00 AM
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Anonymous Citizen


- Joined on 11-22-2008
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Move teachers to state health insurance
Grand idea,
However the MEA will fight this as the teachers union will lose money.
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Anonymous Citizen


- Joined on 11-22-2008
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Teachers don't get 4 months off, friend. Sure there isn't school in the summer, but that doesn't mean that teachers get that time off. You say:
"Tell me what other occupation can you walk into and get 4 months off every year in or even take a full year off and still get your job back."
I reply: Tell me what other occupation requires you to continually take college courses, usually on your own dime, IN ADDITION TO many, many hours of professional development. No, don't bother answering. There is none. If you factor in the amount of time most teachers spend preparing for classes and taking classes and such beginning teachers make less than their students who work at McDonalds.
Furthermore, you say:
"We need to encourage pure competition in educational institutions. Because pure competition has always brought about better quality products at a lower price. It is pure and simple fact!."
Your pure and simple fact is the reason that many of the students in public schools have parents who used to work at Electrolux or Dana and now don't. They're working at Walmart without benefits, so their kids come to school sick, blind, and full of cavities. It's not easy to teach children who are in such a situation, but most teachers do. Competition ignores the fact that the reason for Humanity's success is because the Human is a social creature.
I would like to apologize to you on behalf of all of the bad teachers in your past. It sounds like you must have a lot. I'm sure you worked your hardest and were a perfect angel in the classroom. Most of the teachers in public schools are extremely dedicated--after all, there's not much incentive to becoming a teacher these days. This bill justs makes teaching much less appealing for prospective teachers.
If you would rather not compensate fairly the people who are not only educating your children, but also feeding, healing, loving, and counseling them, then hire a nanny and pay your nanny in potatoes. Better yet, go read to your kids.
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Anonymous Citizen


- Joined on 11-22-2008
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If you think your local school district is not doing a good job in controlling costs, then it's up to you -- as a constituent citizen -- to put pressure on the local school board to do so. If that means negotiating a better health insurance package, cost-wise, in teacher union contract bargaining, that's what you should insist your school board does. Remember, the board members represent you.
The thing is, if you want your school board to hang tough in negotiations, you have to be willing and ready to support the board and its members, visibly. If you don't have the time, energy or grit to do that, then don't whine about outcomes.
Eliminating competition is not the way to bring and hold costs down. Fostering competition is. At least that's what all my conservative friends tell me. And I believe them. This bill would eliminate competition by pulling teacher health benefits under a single state employees system. Draw your own conclusions about what that probably would mean in the long term, if my conservative friends are right.
ÿ
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Anonymous Citizen


- Joined on 11-22-2008
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MEA: "We only care about the children."
Yeah, right.
MEA members comments:
"The union uses our money for their pet political causes, which many members oppose, and resists any request for full and honest disclosure."
More:
"Because they run a monopoly that relies on forced payments, union officials can provide services to the membership that are deficient and feel no obligation to give straight answers to questions about the fundamental rights of their own members."
http://www.mackinac.org/pubs/mer/article.asp?ID=2514
From a different source:
"The teachers unions have more influence over the public schools than any other group in American society . . . The problem is not that the unions are somehow bad or ill-intentioned. They aren't. The problem is that when they simply do what all organizations do--pursue their own interests--they are inevitably led to do things that are not in the best interests of children."
http://www.opinionjournal.com/extra/?id=110006192
Can we at least be honest?
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Anonymous Citizen


- Joined on 11-22-2008
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Let's see now. There is Christmas break, Martin Luther King Day, Presidents Day, Spring Break, Winter term break. Maybe it is a little short of 4 months. But when school is off due to weather the vast majority of people still have to go to work. So you do get paid very well for your occupation. Besides when broken down by the rate per hour the average teacher makes more than accountants, computer programmers, architects, fireman, EMT's, police officers, engineers, and many other types of occupations. This doesn't even include the fringe benefits. Oh some of this time off is spent taken course you say. Well many of these occupation have to do the samething. Please go back to your MEA website and ask them where all your dues go to. Why did they have to increase them last summer? Also ask yourself this question. If you spent your own hardworking money on health benefits, why would you spend 15% more on these benefits if you didn't have to? Our school district offere to pay full benefits no question ask if they would take a different health care provider. But your union reps at this district didn't even LOOK! or consider the package. This package offered the exact same benefits! It would of save the district lots of money. Now we have to look at more cuts. This includes laying off more teachers and increasing the class sizes. I guess this is what you want.
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reason


- Joined on 11-22-2008
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To quote a famous conservative you may be familiar with, "there you go again." As far as President's Day, MLK, and Snow Days, you need to know many do not get MLK off and I know of no discrtict that gets President's day off. Finally, the snow days are a safety issue not a "kick-back" for lazy teachers. I know you find it hard to believe but, not everything in education can operate like a business. With regard to the pay issue, because it is a salaried job, you are required to do the work until its done. That means taking home papers and doing lesson planning and research outside of school. That is part of the deal. Additionally, an average week includes well over the traditional 40 hours. When I am coaching, the weeks stretch to 65 or 70. I figured out my coaching pay rate came out to be $2.07 an hour. Finally, I have never once indicated that I was not paid a decent wage. I merely stated that reducing compensation will not help attract quality teachers. I have seen plenty of excellent teachers leave the profession for more lucrative carees in the private sector. Finally, I have seen those so called "exact same coverage" plans and I want you to think about something, Why would the local bargaining unit you are referring to, bite the hand that feeds it. Furthermore, being the savvy cat you claim to be, you should know that not everything is as advertised. If what you claim is true the teachers would have agreed with the district. Finally, when bargaining contracts teachers unions have very little leverage to influence the local school board bargaining team. Contrary to your belief in the monopolistic MEA, the right of teachers to strike was taken away in the mid 1990s. What is to prevent any district form imposing a contrat on its teachers? The answer is not much.
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reason


- Joined on 11-22-2008
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First of all, lets get something straight. I thought it might have been possible for you and I to have a debate without it turning ugly. The great thing about our country is, although you and I disagree, we still can discuss issues. I am glad however that you have finally shown your real colors. "Scape goats" and "rallying the troops"? I think that might have been a Freudian slip. To keep with the spirit of your cause, you forgot the ever popular NAZI practice of book burning, propaganda, and nationalism. Keeping it simple does work for you because its difficult to comprehend that the problems in education cant be fixed with your 5 minutes of intellectual comtemplation. Seriously, find me one place in America where vouchers, charter schools, Edison or any other management company has done a better job. Oh that might be tough, you'd actually have to think about that one for a while. Looking forward to your response Adolph.
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Anonymous Citizen


- Joined on 11-22-2008
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Be Careful With Myths and Assumptions . . .
>Why should publice school districts have to go through MESSA.<
This rhetorical question is based on a myth.
The fact is, public school districts do not have to go through MESSA, unless that is what they negotiate in the contract with their teachers.
If you have a beef with what your school district is doing in this regard, then let your elected board of education trustees know it. Then, be ready to visibly and firmly stand with your school board members who attempt to negotiate what you think is a better deal for the district. If you’re not willng to do that, don’t whine about the outcome.
>Other health care providers offer the same services at a considerable lower price.<
This may or may not be true. I’d like to see some verifiable data that compares apples to apples and oranges to oranges in terms of actual coverage, co-pays, deductables, premium increase histories, etc., before automatically buying this proposition.
SB 55 would eliminate the very sort of competition many here advocate as a means of containing and controlling cost of employee health insurance benefit packages. It also would further erode local control over schools. Passage of SB 55 would not be a step in any right direction.
>Before Engler what was there to prevent any union to enforce there contracts on communities?<
Looking for ways to permit school districts to evade honoring legitimate contracts they have negotiated and ratified is . . . perverse.
The ultimate club teachers unions presumably have in contract negotiation is the threat of going out on strike. In fact, teachers' union strikes were not legal in pre-Engler days, but that aspect of the law was seldom if ever enforced by local school boards and the courts. What Engler did was provide leadership resulting in legislation that strengthened the earlier strike prohibition. This helped restore what school boards and their lawyers had given away over the three-decade history of school teacher collective bargaining in Michigan.
Again, the key to seeing your local school board settle a contract of which you approve is to stand visibly and firmly alongside board members as they negotiate the deal. If you are not willing to do that you have no business complaining about the outcome.
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