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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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For those of you wondering how exactly the MESSA game works, check out the Wisconsin model. The excerpt is from, the March 21 edition of "EIA Communiqué," a newsletter about teachers' unions:
"Health Care Profiteering in Wisconsin.
School districts often cite the costs of employee health insurance as the cause of budget cuts and program cutbacks. Teachers, administrators and taxpayers alike complain about health insurers that seem to be making obscene profits out of the paychecks of ordinary working people.
Unless you're on the receiving end.
The school board in Cedarburg, Wisconsin, paid $4.5 million in premiums on behalf of its employees, but the employees only submitted $3.4 million in health insurance claims. Who got the other $1.1 million? Their insurer, the WEA Trust. Pretty good profit, right? No, the WEA Trust is raising the district's premiums to almost $4.9 million next year.
"Well, the market rules, right? The district should simply take its business elsewhere. But it can't, because the teachers' union won't hear of it. You see, the WEA Trust was created by the Wisconsin Education Association Council (WEAC), NEA's state affiliate, and WEAC's board of directors elects the board of the WEA Trust, which is made up of former WEAC officers and activists.
Not that the Trust is any hotbed of union solidarity. It had a well-publicized run-in last year with its own employees, whose union accused the Trust of imposing a contract with take-backs in health benefits.
The Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel reports that Cedarburg will investigate a switch to a self-funded insurance plan."
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Anonymous Citizen


- Joined on 11-22-2008
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Tell the truth, now . . .
That’s great. So now tell us something we don’t already know.
What is left out of the little story provided here is that in Michigan (I don’t know about Wisconsin, and don’t especially care), health insurance -- including the provider -- is one of the negotiable items that can be on the table during collective bargaining over teacher contracts. So school districts do, in fact, have opportunity to control who they buy insurance from by being assertive during negotiations.
SB 56 (together with SB 55) would remove health insurance from the list of negotiable contract items. It would thereby restrict the ability of local school districts to tailor their teacher contracts to suit their local circumstances, and would end any possibility of competition being a force in lowering the cost of this item for local school districts. This is not a constructive approach to solving the problem of skyrocketing health insurace premiums.
Even the story from Wisconsin includes a comment that the school district in question does, indeed, have real alternatives to the WI equivalent of MESSA. So what's the real beef?
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Anonymous Citizen


- Joined on 11-22-2008
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You got the point.
By acknowledging that health insurance benefits are, indeed, a negotiable item in teacher contracts you have strengthened the argument that SB 56 and its companion, SB 55, are unnecessary and not constructive. That's progress.
Even the conservative Mackinac Center -- no friend to the teachers’ unions and MESSA -- says this in its summary of SB 56:
“Slightly more than half of Michigan teachers are currently covered by MESSA, an arm of the Michigan Education Association teachers union, which repackages Blue Cross/Blue Shield insurance, collects premiums, and administers benefits. Most other teachers are covered by Blue Cross/Blue Shield without MESSA involvement.”
Of course this means that nearly half of Michigan teachers do NOT receive their health insurance coverage through MESSA. And that means MESSA holds far less than the monopoly position the union bashers and MESSA critics like to outright claim or slyly imply it does. Thus, SB 56 and its partner, SB 55, have been concocted to “solve” a “problem” that really doesn’t exist, which is a good working description of very bad legislation.
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Anonymous Citizen


- Joined on 11-22-2008
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"Prohibit collective bargaining"
I think that the most dangerous portion of this particular bill is the phrase "prohibit collective bargaining."
There is a person who stated that we have other things to bargain for; severance pay (teachers get nothing currently when they are laid off, other than unemployment), vacation days (there is no such thing for a teacher; they can bargain their calendar, but they don't have the ability just to take a day off when they choose like other professions) and the like.
I think that a big concern of some teachers is that they've already bargained quite a bit to keep their great health care. They're afraid that they already have lower salaries as a result, and they won't see a return in that bargaining now. They'll just have lost the good health care and have poor insurance, as well.
But the most pressing concern is that phrase -
"prohibit collective bargaining." It seems that this phrase could set a precedent by which the state could prohibit collective bargaining for other things, then other state jobs, and then, ultimately, for everyone everywhere forever. Isn't that a slippery slope?
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Anonymous Citizen


- Joined on 11-22-2008
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Here's The Value Added You Seek
>where have the unions been in helping michigans economy? if pay and benefits were tied to value added then surely we wouldnt have the 4th highest paid teachers and the worst economy.<
Attempting to make this connection is absurd. The private sector drives the Michigan economy, which increasingly is incapable of delivering attractive employment opportunities to state residents.
At least our public school teachers continue to provide the service of educating our kids so they can escape the dead end employment situation in Michigan and earn decent livings elsewhere, in states that have not been let down by private enterprise. That’s a tremendous value.
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Anonymous Citizen


- Joined on 11-22-2008
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The fact of the matter is ALL health costs are on the rise dramatically. MESSA is a non-profit organization whose books are "open"
The problem, as I see it is the health care system at large. Not enough people have coverage, seek help only in the ER (where the costs are astronomical) and sue the $*#% out of any doctor and/or hospital who so much as misdiagnoses a paper-cut.
Furthermore, if the State of Michigan REALLY thinks that it can save money by this rediculous stunt, they are mistaken. Cutting corners in this way will lead to overall poorer health of the public school employees, which in turn means more costs in substitues (teachers, bus drivers, etc...).
The bottom line as I see it is that it comes to the bargaining table. The Unions (AFT / MEA) can negotiate thier positions with the individual school boards where thier membership is represented. MESSA has MANY different coverage options, and I am sure that if a particular local association were amenable, they could terminate thier use of the MESSA.
There is a lot of discussion in this State about local control of Districts and the soverginty of the elected school board. A lot of people in my commutity are feverently in favor of Union Rights (ususally the UAW, where I live). Furthermore, I have NEVER IN MY LIFE heard anyone say that they wanted settle for second or third best when it came to thier health (or the health of thier family). These are fine ideals, I believe they represent some of the core democratic principles upon which this country was founded.
I fail to understand why then, when it comes to "somebody else" or "those teachers" these glorious ideals cannot be upheld. All Americans have the right to union representation; within that union, the right to bargain, in good faith, for the betterment of all members.
If the State Government wishes to solve its finnancial problems, it should look at REALISTIC long term solutions, and stop trying to put tiny band aids over the problems. These short sighted, short term solutions will only serve to hurt our State in the long run.
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Anonymous Citizen


- Joined on 11-22-2008
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I would love to live in your bizzare little world.....
If you really think that the school boards give the unions what they want consider this:
1. Teschers cannot (legally) strike.
2. Teachers nor thier unions cannot really bargain thier contracts. Instead, they are most often forced to take a "best offer" from the school board, or work with out a contract (see #1).
3. Most board members are so detached from the schools and children they represent that they could not identify students that belong to the district (save for thier own children or friends)
The best child advocate besides the parent is the teacher. To suggest that teachers do not have the right to bargain thier own contracts is to suggest they are somehow 2nd or 3rd class citizens, not entitled to full protection under labor laws.
I am sure no one would openly suggest relagating this amount of classism on anyone.
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mickeyvcl


- Joined on 11-22-2008
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is it the same as legislature?
Will the health insurance be the same that our legislature receives?
It should make barging easer; it seems that that is the only thing that concerns superintendents these days, the cost of insurance.
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