Showing posts with label Right to Work. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Right to Work. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 8, 2012

Snyder Snippets: Auto Manufacturers "regret" their move to Right-to-Work States

Just in case he's thinking of forgetting things he might have said, here are the statements made by Rick Snyder on Feb 8, 2012 in reference to Michigan workers and Right to Work (for less).

"We (Snyder and team) were meeting with some of the auto companies at the auto show (who) say that their companies regretted being in the southern part [of the country, where right-to-work laws are common] because they weren't getting the SKILLED WORKFORCE the same way that they would in MICHIGAN."
-- Stateline Online
See the complete INTERVIEW with Snyder in "Seven questions for Michigan Governor Rick Snyder" conducted by Melissa Maynard and Jim Malewitz, Stateline Feb 08, 2012

Important Snyder Snippets:

STATELINE: Do you think the research is clear on whether right-to-work would help improve Michigan's economy, political considerations about the fights over getting it passed aside?

SNYDER: No. Actually I think if you look at some of the labor agreements out there, there are some really competitive ones. And if you look at productivity overall, we actually had people when we were meeting with some of the auto companies at the auto show say that their companies regretted being in the southern part [of the country, where right-to-work laws are common] because they weren't getting the skilled workforce the same way that they would in Michigan and the flexibility. They were having people taken away for other lower wage situations versus having the right talent at the right place.

SNYDER: This is not something people should overreact to. In many respects when people say right-to-work, it's like one of those red flag kinds of issues where too many people just sort of have a visceral reaction and say "ok, here's my position and I'm not open to listening to anything else." That's not how good government should operate. I want to listen and hear it and work on it.

STATELINE: What about the state's labor relations with its own employees?


SNYDER: We had successful collective bargaining with our own employees at the state level. I want to give credit to [UAW President] Bob King. It was literally a case where the UAW took the lead and he had great people working for him, but Bob and I got on the phone and we actually met a couple of times to sort of hash through issues. WE GOT THINGS RESOLVED. In the end IT WAS GREAT that when we hit a loggerhead we just sat down and talked and got a good agreement done. (emphasis added)

For all of those of you with limited legislative experience or knowledge of Michigan's political history: Former Gov. John Engler often said, "Michigan's autoworkers are world-class!"

FULL TRANSCRIPT of Rick Snyder Interview with StateLine.

Original.

Friday, October 7, 2011

No Rights for Teacher Union Organization: Randy Richardville’s TeaPartisan Teacher Rights Libel Legislation

Randy Richardville's crude lawmaking revenge on Teacher's Professional Organizations is based on a specific TeaPartisan Teacher Rights Libel. Don't expect Richardville to accurately represent the role of teacher organizations in the school workplace. He's not well-informed as to the actual conditions in today's education.

Much of the rationale foisted on the public by Richardville libels the real facts and demeans a great profession. If you are a devoted teacher there is NOTHING BETTER YOU WILL EVER DO.

Richardville's vilification of Michigan Teachers en mass, in his high-handed, brutal fashion (faux-right to work regs,) is a complete verification of the untrustworthiness of this TeaPublican dominated Michigan Government-its small mindedness. It's actions fly in the face of the honorable actions of former Governors (e.g. Gov. George Romney - who signed into law the collective bargaining that ushered in a golden age of teaching and professionalism 1965-1990) and legislators; statespeople-who understood and accepted the right of teachers to act as professionals and have a defined voice in their day-to-day classroom efforts, entering the learning place day-after-day to nurture and mentor pupils in their educational journeys and meet their individual/special needs.

Those who demean this sacred vocation are unworthy of credulity or voracity.

Richardville's ongoing Rad Right assault on teachers; discriminates against them with his "Teacher-Right-to-Work" prevented-the-right-and-privileges-of-collective-bargaining-via-organizing-professionally." Richardville's targeted legislation is a frontal assault; summarily, arbitrarily, discriminating against a targeted set of professionals held to be political enemies of the TeaPublican coup. The coup attacks teachers in a spasm of meanspiritedness and unvarnished partisanship.

This anti-union action is the bottom of the loathsome profit-takers' chum bucket: just one of many attacks the TeaParty rabble has brought into the restored peoples' house, Michigan's historic Capitol. This is a dark and foreboding hour in those chambers.

Richard Studley and the tassel loafered lobbyists over at the Michigan Chamber of Commerce are in a state of heightened euphoria. This Richardville action fulfills one of their most coveted goals (SEE "Strategic Union Avoidance - How to Remain Union Free").
:

These malingering TeaPublicans, led by Richardville, are anathema to democracy, fair play, and local control. They are fringe dwellers who are in-fact out of control. They're totally out of step with the majority of the public-running wild in spasms of vituperative spiels and led about by the American Legislative Exchange Council (plug and play) control of the direction lawmaking in Michigan. Specific language is spooned fed to them by corporations, most based outside Michigan. A.L.E.C. members slip it into bill submission and press for its passage into law.

"Nerd" Snyder has, with the aid of over 90 past or present Michigan A.L.E.C. members, moved in a direction dictated by the top 1% of the nation's wealth holders, the mega-rich elites: Koch Bros, Walton Family, DeVos Family, Bradley Family, and a plethora of others - just as rich and influential-determined to profit/privatize at the expense of the middle class; of which TEACHERS are in integral and important part.

Richardville dutifully represents these vast monied interests with vigor. What about his local community? Those local teachers he has demeaned and attacked? How can Richardville claim to represent those who are his constituents?


Richardville Lays Out His Plan of Attack on OFF THE RECORD

HOST TIM SKUBICK TO RICHARDVILLE: Right to work?

RICHARDVILLE: Uh, not Right to Work. No, uh, I'm not a believer that that's going to transition the economy at this point. However, I will look at some other things, maybe a subset of that. If you pay dollars into a public school system, you send your kids there, you want to participate, I don't know that you necessarily need to be a part of a union in order to work or teach in the school district.

SKUBICK: So "Right to Work for Teachers".

RICHARDVILLE: I would call it the "Right to Teach" or "The Right to Participate" in the education system.

SKUBICK : Put that in a practical way. So that means that the MEA wouldn't get members or how would that work?

RICHARDVILLE: Well, they could still offer their membership but it, uh, it wouldn't be a forced membership. They would have to recruit and do their work off-campus.

DETROIT FREE PRESS REPORTER CHRIS CHRISTOFF: Why would single out schools for that? Public schools?

RICHARDVILLE: Well, because right now, the public schools are the one that are in dire straits and I believe that those unions and those workers that are out in the day-to-day, you know the teamsters, the engineers, the carpenters, the building trades, they've already had a significant effect from this economy. They're paying more for their health care, they have less hours, they're getting less pay.

They've had that effect directly.

What's happened in the public schools and, in some cases, the public government in general, is that that economic impact hasn't hit. And so we're making those adjustments for that reason.

SKUBICK: Is this an anti-MEA move?

RICHARDVILLE: No, no, not at all.

SKUBICK: An attempt to get even?

RICHARDVILLE: No, but we do have to "

SKUBICK: You're not trying to take on the MEA, right?

RICHARDVILLE: I don't think taking on any union has anything to do with what our agenda is.

SEE: 1. "Senate Majority Leader Richardville Takes Aim At MEA"

SEE 2. Off the Record, September 9, 2011.

The Off the Record transcript shows the shallow and uninformed mind-set of Richardville. His denial of the TeaPublican's obvious vindictive intent and obfuscation are affirmations of his own true motivation. He's a "tool" of forces so overwhelming, he cannot defend against their influence and survive.

Senator Richardville is a sell-out to the elites who are pulling down Michigan and also America. Cocksure of his devotion to corporate directed radical ideology, Sen. Richardville is profoundly wrong. Richardville will be well-remembered as an anti-education cutout lacking depth and dimension.

This dust-up; a spade of threatening, boorish, and angry anti-teacher legislation polluting the halls of lawmaking; and demeaning our premiere helping profession-those who are mentoring the young-rests with Richardville and his off-the-rails TeaPublican legislature.

Even though Rick Snyder may veto this Teacher/MEA/R2W legislation, if it's put on his desk, the damage done to these politicians will be long-lasting and with direct impact on the ability of these pols to retain or seek further office.

A Republican cannot go against the historic conservative tenets and time-honored standards of the GOP, local community, and the community's finest citizens and not suffer many serious repercussions of its own making.


Original.

Thursday, September 15, 2011

A.L.E.C. Tool: Randy Richardville announces the next kamikaze attack on public schools

The clearly partisan and aggressive leader of the TeaPublican super majority in the Michigan Senate indicated that he would selectively attack collective bargaining by singling out MEA for a spiteful revenge, the so-called Right-to-Teach design to obfuscate and hinder the teachers from their right to freely associate with one another in a professional association where working conditions, hours, instruction, personal privileges and etc. are negotiated in "good faith" with their local school boards.

TeaPublican Randy Richardville's proclamation was so blunt and out of step with the normal sense of decency and good order that the panelists on Tim Skubick's Off the Record were visibly taken aback and attempted to reason with Richardville.

When the panel attempted to aid Richardville into a more honest, civil concept of what is needed in this present manufactured school funding crisis, to which they openly alluded (it is Gov. Rick Snyder and the TeaPublicans themselves who cut funding, combined the K-12 with higher education to defraud the K-12 system of some $600 million in surplus), Richardville seemed unscathed, he is on a pre-programmed jihad and there is little or nothing short of recall that will stop his radical evisceration of Michigan's public school system.

Nothing.

Absolutely Nothing!

In this same timeframe, Michigan observer and pundit Jack Lessenberry wrote this piece in light of an ongoing and an unrelenting multi-million dollar anti-public education disinformation campaign by Betsy DeVos and the Richard McLellan led hectoring via the Mackinac Center.

Jack Lessenberry:
"Nobody, it seems is happy with public education in the state - how it is working or what it costs. Those trying to run school systems are bitter over continuing state budgets - at the same time they are being held to higher standards and being asked to do more.

"To them, the legislature seems almost in a 'punishment mode,' as one school official put it, seemingly more concerned with reducing teachers' pensions and benefits than in education itself.

"Some school officials honestly believe there is a conspiracy in the legislature to destroy public education and replace it with a system of charter schools and vouchers.

"Lawmakers, or at least the GOP majority, talk as if the schools are in trouble because their employees are still getting "Cadillac benefits" that they can no longer afford in the post-automotive age.

"And members of the public are baffled. "Wasn't Proposal A supposed to fix all this?" asked Janet, a middle-aged woman standing in line at a pizza carry-out in the Detroit suburb of Berkley.

"What happened?"

Richardville Dove Into the Deep Muck
Quick to hop on any opening, former Ann Arbor news hound, Tom Gantert seized on Richardville's targeted vengeance: Right-to-Work-for-Teachers-legislation - designed to further hamper the ability of teachers to act in concert with one another for the good of public education and the children they teach-is vindictive. There will be any number of other "pig pile" legislative bills heaped on public teachers by Richardville and his hate filled TeaPublican legislative Super Majority.

Gantert's report from Capitol Confidential, Mackinac Center's news tabloid stated:
"Richardville also said he didn't support right-to-work for the entire state, saying he didn't think it would "transition the economy."

"Amber McCann, Richardville's spokeswoman, said he was in favor of right-to-work for teachers because teachers unions haven't dealt with the financial problems districts are facing.

"Richardville said any plans to implement right-to-teach was not about taking on the MEA."

"'I don't think taking on any union has anything to do with what our agenda is,' Richardville said.

"Detroit Federation of Teachers President Keith Johnson called Richardville's comments 'another example of this relentless assault on public education and public educators and teachers' unions that is completely unwarranted.'

"Johnson said it was part of the GOP's strategy to privatize teachers and eliminate the teacher protections unions provide."
Among the comments posted to Gantert's piece "Senate Leader Supports Right to Work for Teachers" on Sept 9, 2011 is this insightful account:
"...(B)ased on my own experience as both a former union member and a former non-union administrator in public service, I strongly disagree with you. Many times I or other union members donated time and/or bent the contract rules because we/they knew the money wasn't there for overtime. Yet, since we/they lived in the community, and were consummate professionals who took pride in their profession, all knew things had to get done and in a timely fashion. As a matter of fact, we used to quip, "I bet you'd never see this in the private sector." Not to mention the active role in problem solving that we/they played that probably saved taxpayers ten of thousands."
Unaffected by schoolhouse reality, the Mackinac Center's Gantert projects and promotes the A.L.E.C./Mackinac Center line:
"Randy Richardville deserves credit for recognizing the damage that forced unionism has done to public schools."

Wholly directed and owned by the Mackinac Center (Heritage Foundation in Michigan) and the American Legislative Exchange Council, Betsy DeVos et. al., just a hapless small time sock puppet, Richardville has no choice.

No choice at all!


Original.

Thursday, January 20, 2011

Prof Gary's Bridge to Nowhere

Response to Gary Wolfram in "Major SOS (Rick Snyder State of the State Speech) initiatives" on the Michigan View / Detroit News January 20, 2011.

One should fully appreciate Wolfram's bridge to nowhere: Guv Rick, listen to this professor: Let's take the Right-to-Work-for-Less bridge directly to Mississippiafication of Michigan.

Gary, Gary!

Open the smudged portal in your ivory tower, get away from the fine particles swirling round your head, emanating from your over-heated copy machine.

Unions are the real source of democracy in the workplace.

But how would you know that?


Original Post.

Wednesday, October 7, 2009

The only place a teacher gets a fair shake in the Detroit News is on its obituary page

Response to Nolan Finley in "Teacher perks bleed budget Dry" in the Detroit News first published on October 7, 2009. 

DetNews reader BruceSimpson asks: What is the status of an educator in the Republican Party?

The Republican Party is one of only two major political organizations that are said to represent the public in legislative endeavors. If you are not part of one of these two parties you are totally out of the loop. For example, it has been particularly precious to give a big compliment to Gov. Mitt Romney and/or Scott Romney every time they are about the area.

Say I, "I'd like to thank you again on behalf of your father, George, for singing into law the provision in 1965 that gave teachers the right to bargain." 

Of course this causes consternation and a flummoxed look on their faces, because they don't want to admit to that signal event and certainly don't support what "professional bargaining" has accomplished.

George's boys have allowed themselves to be caught up in the anti-tax, starve government, wingnut mood created by treacherous ideologies that have invaded the historic Republican Party. A party which has always, heretofore, been a party of support for public education, the nation's historic institutions, and worked for the common good, albeit in a decidedly conservative vein.

The current crowd of GOP'ers in Lansing are like burrowing termites. Below the painted surface of the beautiful capitol edifice they are chewing to dust the very institutions and governmental structure that sustains and supports our forward progress. Scarce noticed until the entire state topples in a cloud of sawdust.

How do I know this? What is the perspective of a Republican educator?

I have faithfully and personally witnessed hundreds of hours of the school funding legislative struggle since July of 1993: 1.) Stabenow/Engler. That event removed all school operating funding then and led to Prop A. 2.) The infamous state showdown/shut down of September 30, 2007, and 3.) The wacky fiasco of Wednesday into early morning Thursday, 2009.


I know many of the players. I've observed the games and parliamentary stunts.

When are we going to see a legislature that doesn't "play house" with state budgets and school funding--now that Republicans have (since Proprosal A) taken over school operating funding and destroyed their once venerated and sacrosanct demand for maintaining local control?

For years I have personally read and taken notice of the stream of venom which has perpetually issued forth from the Detroit News toward teachers and their professional association e.g. (Teachers derail budget, Online Editorial, Detroit News, 10.1.09).

So I am not surprised that the habitual harangues which have been the staple of the News should project themselves unto the state's teachers--who have so valiantly protected the quality education of the children of this state and championed the neighborhood schools (so shabbily treated by such perpetual nabobs as the News and its wicked twin sister the Englerite/Dow Mackinac Center).

The only place a teacher gets a fair shake in the Detroit News is on its obit pages. An educator must literally die in order to get positive treatment way back in the pages of the News.

When one considers the burdens that are borne by heroic teachers and the ubiquitous silence of the News toward the Federation (based primarily in struggling urban Detroit, but seldom the target of political mudslinging by the News), it becomes clear that the editorial stance of the News continues to be anti-teacher and anti-autoworker, and anti-anyone courageous enough to stand up to the froth of a tone deaf and greedy core of Mackinac Center-hobnailed Republicans. They are advocates of so-called Right-to-Work initiatives. It was and is the goal of this cadre to bring down the MEA, and if they hurt kids or destroy entire systems such as Grand Rapids in the process, who cares?

So it is a treat to see, in this round, responsive and responsible Republicans who are willing to risk the wrath of the "no new taxes" covenant makers and do whatever it takes to assure that we put kids first.

Think about it. It is senseless to take an oath to uphold the state constitution and at the same time make a pledge, in a cast iron way, not to raise new taxes. Just so, it would be insane and senseless to pledge to some other pressure group that as a legislator one would never allocate or approve expending any new or future revenue. The constitutional duty of the legislature is to levy taxes and to disperse such funds as are needed to carry out the needs, mission, and the duties of state government.

Note too, the News has sat on its hands as the Big Three have folded under the negative and arcane cloak of apologetics from an elitist Richard D. McLellan or a David Littmann--just when skilled workers have been ejected from their jobs and vital research and development have been transshipped overseas.

Littmann makes himself more than abundantly clear as to where he and the Big Bucks Mackers come from: "The single most important element in reform " long-lasting, durable economic and financial reform " for this state, so that we can become a magnet for attraction of business and jobs " is to make it a right-to-work (state)," says Littmann in an online Mackinac Center interview "A free-to-choose labor state. Without that, there's no reason to be in Michigan. Absolutely no comparative advantages."

Michigan can not simplistically continue to "cut" its way to economic and manufacturing success. There must be a positive vision and freedom to plan and spend to make success, in the place of failure, possible. That's what we expect from the legislature and the governor. It's Michigan's pro-active total "culture" that will attract and keep new start-ups and key to "culture" is education.

It will be clear, someday quite soon, that the teachers' association and the neighborhood public schools are more essential, vital and enduring in Michigan's communities than an empty and rusting News dispenser--witnessing as we are the creeping death of a once mighty Detroit News whose goals and values are not ours as ordinary citizens and do not advance Michigan's necessary rebound and recovery.

Those education dollars spent on the public schools are the absolute vital heart of the essential economies of so many of our towns and cities in Michigan, their turnover keeps economies healthy and going. MESSA insurance payouts support and aid hospitals to underwrite the un-insured and the under-insured, who, by federal law, are receiving emergency room treatment paid, in part, by such insureds as teachers and school employees.

All this transpires without nary a peep from the New's chattering nabobs--whose gilded ideological cage continues to be lined on its bottom with the molding editorial pages of past News negativist frippery.

The News's own economic future? Likely we will have to do without its cynical opines as its readership continues to drop.

Original Article.