Author Archives: Joe Doc

Nutter calls for dissolution of School Reform Commission

By Kristen A. Graham

– Mayor Nutter on Tuesday recommended scrapping the School Reform Commission, which has governed Philadelphia publicly funded schools for the last 15 years, saying it is time for “the experiment to end.”

In his final policy speech on an issue he called the most important of his administration, Nutter advocated creation of a board of education composed of five people picked by the mayor and four selected from City Council nominees.

The mayor suggested this change be put in place by September 2018 – but only if schools are better funded by Harrisburg, with a restoration to districts of state reimbursement for pupils in charter schools; if a “fair” funding formula is enacted; and after a full year of public forums on the topic.

“Returning to local control means the voters of this city know who to hold accountable for educational outcomes: the mayor,” said Nutter, whose eight-year term ends Jan. 4, effectively leaving the matter to his successor.

Nutter’s education valedictory was less a reflection on his record and more a call to action. He promised in 2008 to halve the city’s dropout rate and double the number of college graduates during his tenure, neither of which he came close to achieving.

Just one in 10 Philadelphia ninth graders earns a college degree. The city’s graduation rate has improved 12 percentage points to 65 percent, but still lags behind that of other American big cities. And on a recent visit to the public school for incarcerated youths, students told Nutter that the best educational experience they ever had was in prison.

“Education is our first line of defense against the growing tide of inequity in our city and this nation,” the mayor said. “Right now, our current system is failing too many of our young people.

Nutter, who criticized Harrisburg for years of cuts to city schools and its current budget stalemate, said shifting governance was one way to drive necessary educational changes already occurring in districts around the country.

The likely next mayor, Democrat Jim Kenney, has said he fears dissolving the SRC would give the state license to give the district less funding.

On Tuesday, a Kenney spokeswoman declined to answer specific questions about his stance on Nutter’s proposals.

“Jim’s immediate focus is on the funding crisis,” Lauren Hitt said. “He feels that the city cannot allow a debate over the district’s governance to put the state funding we desperately need at risk.”

SRC Chair Marjorie Neff, a Nutter appointee, said that “having a nine-member school board is preferable to having only five people involved in decisions,” but made it clear that she does not “want the issue of governance to overshadow the issue of full and fair funding. We need resources to change outcomes for students.”

William R. Hite Jr., Philadelphia School District superintendent, declared himself “a firm believer in local control, whatever that looks like,” but also underscored that the money situation has to be fixed before that happens.

“Without addressing that issue, it actually doesn’t matter what the governance structure looks like,” Hite said.

The state took over the school system in 2001, replacing the board because of academic and financial struggles.

Also, she said, the union and community groups have been pushing to abolish the SRC for years, helping to drive onto the May ballot a nonbinding referendum where a majority called for an end to the commission.

The mayor, Linardopoulous pointed out, did not support or acknowledge the movement then.

Nutter said he had “pretty much spent every day, for almost the whole day, for the last eight years” focused on education.

He urged his successor to “set a new, ambitious education goal, not just an achievable one.”

“Education,” Nutter said, “is the single issue that can take a good city and make it great, the best it can be.

Source – http://www.philly.com/philly/education/20151028_Nutter__Dissolve_the_School_Reform_Commission.html

Philadelphia Council AFL-CIO – Help us Get out the vote in the last week before the election!

By The Philadelphia Council AFL-CIO

– The November 3rd election will set the course for Philadelphia for the next 4 years, and for the Pennsylvania Supreme Court for a decade or more. And as we’ve known all along, the results of this election will depend on how many Philadelphians come vote on November 3rd.

The last 10 days are the most important part of the Get Out the Vote campaign. Now is the time to volunteer to help us give thousands of voters in Philadelphia the information and motivation they need to help make history on November 3rd.

Get Out the Vote shifts will run all day, every day from Friday, October 30th through 8:00 PM on Tuesday, November 3rd.

Staging Locations

Northeast Philly: Sprinklerfitters Local 692 — 14002 McNulty Rd, Philadelphia 19154
Germantown: Working America office — 5225 Germantown Ave (rear entrance), Philadelphia 19144
South Philly: Seafarers International Union hall — 2604 South 4th St (4th and Oregon), Philadelphia 19148

Shift Times (all 3 locations)

Friday, October 30th: 1:00 PM, 4:00 PM
Saturday, October 31st: 10:00 AM, 1:00 PM, 4:00 PM
Sunday, November 1st: 1:00 PM, 4:00 PM
Monday, November 2nd: 10:00 AM, 1:00 PM, 4:00 PM
Tuesday, November 3rd ELECTION DAY: 10:00 AM, 1:00 PM, 4:00 PM

Please contact Philadelphia Council AFL-CIO Campaign Manager Danny Bauder at dbauder(at)philaflcio(dot)org or 215-665-9800 to sign up for your volunteer canvass shift!

Source – http://www.pa.aflcio.org/philaflcio/index.cfm?action=article&articleID=AA4BC84B-8051-4FDB-A130-372F5076C7D9

PFT PRESIDENT JERRY JORDAN ON DISTRICT’S DECISION TO HALT PLANS TO OUTSOURCE NURSES

By the Philadelphia Federation of Teachers

PHILADELPHIA–“The District made the right decision by not outsourcing the services of certified school nurses. Unfortunately, Philadelphia has a severe shortage of nurses that needs to be addressed immediately.

“Over 100 certified school nurses were released four years ago by the District, jeopardizing the health and safety of thousands of schoolchildren. The District’s budget for these nursing positions still hasn’t been restored. The District made the crisis even worse this school year by failing to fill 20 school nurse vacancies.

Philadelphia serves a large number of medically fragile schoolchildren from low-income households. In many instances, school nurses are their primary source of healthcare.

“Reversing course on a privatization scheme is a start, but our children deserve much more. The PFT will continue to call on the District to ensure that every child in every school has access to a full time certified school nurse.”

Pennsylvania AFL-CIO Condemns Paycheck Deception Bill Approved By The Pennsylvania State Senate

By The PA. AFL-CIO

– Pennsylvania AFL-CIO President Rick Bloomingdale and Secretary-Treasurer Frank Snyder condemned the passage of paycheck deception legislation, Senate Bill 501, on Wednesday, October 14 by the Pennsylvania State Senate. The union-busting legislation is now in the Pennsylvania House of Representatives. Please contact your State Representative and urge him to oppose S.B. 501 and any other Right-to-Work for less measure.

President Bloomingdale stated, “This extreme legislation – S.B. 501 – silences the voices of working families and their ability to advocate for safe jobs, improvements in services, public safety and policies that expand our middle class. It prohibits school teachers, nurses and caregivers, and public safety workers from negotiating payroll deductions but allows corporations to continue using payroll deductions which are used to fund their political campaigns. Not only does it take away our rights to negotiate voluntary payroll deductions it also prohibits counties, municipalities, and school districts from having the right to negotiate with their employees without interference from the State. It reeks of discrimination against working families and their unions and interferes with the ability of local governments and school districts to negotiate agreements that lower costs and savings for taxpayers.”

Secretary-Treasurer Snyder stated, “S.B. 501 is an anti-working family bill that tilts the balance of power in favor of corporations and out of state billionaires who are trying to buy our State Government and pursue an anti-worker, anti-middle class agenda. This is nothing more than Right-to-Work for less, which weakens our rights, silences our voice, and lines the pockets of the rich and powerful. Instead of supporting good public policies that re-invest in our schools, good jobs, and strong communities, they choose to put us in a race to bottom toward lower wages, no benefits, and unsafe jobs. Instead of attacking workers, they should be supporting our public schools, rebuilding our infrastructure and creating good family sustaining jobs. Do the job you were sent to Harrisburg for!”

Source – http://www.paaflcio.org/?p=6487

Why Kevin Dougherty is the Candidate for Pa. Supreme Court of Working Families.

– The Pennsylvania Supreme Court is the highest court in the Commonwealth and the oldest appellate court in the nation, predating the United States Supreme Court by 67 years. The court consists of seven justices, each elected to ten year terms. The justice with the longest continuous service on the court automatically becomes Chief Justice. Justices must step down from the Supreme Court when they reach the age of 70. There are currently three vacancies on the court which are up for election in 2015.

The Pa. Supreme Court justices have a very important effect on working families. On Election day November 3, 2015, make sure you get involved and become a part of the process and vote like your union livelihood depends on it because IT DOES!

About Kevin Dougherty

Family

Kevin spent most of his judicial career helping Pennsylvania’s most vulnerable children find loving homes. His reforms led to a massive decline in the number of children in foster care, a surge in the number of adoptions, and made Philadelphia a national leader in the collection of child support. His work also improved the way social services are targeted toward at-risk youth, helping them receive the education and behavioral health they need to become happy, healthy, and productive citizens.

Integrity

Throughout his career, Kevin has always conducted himself with the highest level of personal integrity. As an assistant DA, Kevin prosecuted some of the most serious criminal matters in Pennsylvania. As a judge, he worked tirelessly to ensure the judicial system was producing positive outcomes for children and families in the smartest, most cost effective way possible. On the Supreme Court, Judge Dougherty will bring his record of administrative reform and commitment to personal integrity to courts statewide.

Justice for All

Kevin believes the justice system must provide fair and equal access to everyone. When in private practice, he provided legal representation to many who could not afford it. As a Family Court judge, he always made sure every juvenile who came before his court had competent legal representation.

Source – http://www.doughertyforpa.com/