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Category Archives: News

Merry Christmas and Happy Holidays from Your Friends at PhillyLabor and Today In PhillyLabor Radio

To Our Philadelphia Area Labor Community and Beyond,

As we enjoy this Holiday season, let us be thankful for the things we have, to those who have forged the way to make them possible and for the will and determination to continue to fight so that future generations may also enjoy them.

As is the union way, let us also keep in our thoughts our service men and women in harms way and continue to give back to those less fortunate so that they too may live a life of dignity and pride!

Merry Christmas and Happy Holidays!

In Solidarity,

From Everyone at PhillyLabor and
Today In PhillyLabor Radio

Hite contract deal shows SRC’s misplaced priorities

By Matthew L. Mandel

– Superintendent William R. Hite Jr. referred to a recent education bill passed by the Pennsylvania Senate as a “recipe for disaster.” That phrase also describes the School Reform Commission’s decision to extend Hite’s contract by five years, with two years remaining on the original.

In a statement, SRC Chair Marjorie Neff said it was the right time to lock in Hite for the long term, lauding him for demonstrating “strong leadership through an extraordinarily difficult time.” I wonder if she feels the same about losing scores of superb classroom teachers who left to work somewhere they feel valued and respected, or the many more who retired because they couldn’t take the conditions and mistreatment in the School District of Philadelphia anymore.

Neff, a retired teacher and principal, nearly discarded 50 years of collective bargaining progress when she supported cancellation of the teachers’ contract last year. She called that decision one of the most difficult of her life. She doesn’t appear nearly as troubled, however, that a district on financial life-support has spent millions on bad contracts and the endless pursuit of judicial relief from its obligations.

One could argue that Hite has achieved everything he was hired to do and, thus, has earned another contract. Bright, tireless, ambitious, and evidently dynamic, I’m sure there’s a lot to admire about him.

It would also be unfair to suggest that Hite alone is responsible for the catastrophic failure of reform efforts here since the state takeover. Neff and others likely will say that Hite just hasn’t had the resources to achieve his goals. No one knows how that feels more than the district’s teachers.

I’m puzzled by the apparent urgency to get this contract extension done now, with no state budget, stagnant test scores, unhealthy and deplorable conditions in school buildings, and taxpayers who believe they have no voice in education decisions. Could it be that the district was afraid of losing him? If so, it points to another troubling pattern that has festered under state control of Philadelphia’s schools.

In a district with the highest child poverty rate in America – and dedicated but demoralized employees that have gone four years without a raise – the unelected and unaccountable SRC continues to place its emphasis on meeting the needs of central office management and charter-school operators rather than of the children and educators who spend their lives in Philly’s public schools.

This contract extension is just the latest example of how the SRC’s priorities don’t align with what’s important to the district’s educators, children, and caregivers. And the latest example of this dichotomy should serve as a rallying cry to return to local control of our schools.

Our district educates some of the nation’s neediest children, but lacks even basic supplies and enough critical staff to compensate for the unfair hand dealt to many of our kids. Yet, the SRC has prioritized a contract extension that affords Hite the security that Philadelphia’s teachers, children, and caregivers can only dream of.

All of this reflects, more than ever, a pressing need to restore sanity and local control of our schools. A school board that was accountable to the public wouldn’t be as shameless and cavalier about pursuing such misplaced priorities.

Continuing to indulge the SRC’s pursuits is truly a recipe for disaster.

(Matthew L. Mandel is a teacher in the School District of Philadelphia)

Source – http://mobile.philly.com/beta?wss=%2Fphilly%2Fopinion&id=363092881

Attack On Pensions Defeated In The House – But Could Resurface

By The PA. AFL-CIO

– On Saturday, 12/19, more than half of House Republicans joined with the entire Democratic caucus in voting down SB1071 by a final tally of 149 (N) to 52 (Y). We would like to thank the legislators who opposed this terrible legislation today, and we would especially like to acknowledge the thousands of union members across the State who made phones calls and sent emails opposing SB1071 in the final days and hours before this critical vote.

While this was a significant victory, the House did keep the option to reconsider this bill, meaning that it could be brought up again for another vote at any time. In the context of an ongoing budget impasse, this is a very real threat. Workers have won this battle but not the war. This pension bill was not ‘reform,’ it did nothing to address the unfunded liability, and it relied on unconstitutional reductions in the benefits of current employees to create the illusion of savings. Such cynical and ill-conceived legislative attacks have no place in debate over the State budget.

It’s important that we all stay vigilant and continue to contact our legislators with a simple message. Pass a real budget that restores education cuts. Reject any attacks on public pensions and any efforts to privatize public assets such as the State Wine and Spirits Shops.

Thank you for your activism and your advocacy on behalf of your fellow workers and union members.

Source – http://www.paaflcio.org/?p=6706

Urgent Action: Tell Your Rep To Oppose SB1071 – Most Dangerous Attack On Pensions Yet

By The PA. AFL-CIO

– The State House is currently debating SB1071, a terrible overhaul to the State’s public pension systems, which would take Pennsylvania from having one of the best pension systems in the County, to having the 3rd worst in the nation.

What’s worse is that the bill would affect both future and CURRENT employees, undermining their retirement security and likely increasing the employee contribution. If the provisions affecting current employees are struck down by the courts as unconstitutional, then the remaining provisions of SB1071 would result in a net additional COST to taxpayers of $2 billion.

SB1071 does not address the unfunded liability, and it does not even provide any immediate savings for the current budget that is being negotiated.

To E-mail your State Representative NOW! Tell them to OPPOSE SB1071, and stop the constant attacks on public workers and retirement security, go to: https://actionnetwork.org/letters/urgent-action-tell-your-rep-to-oppose-sb1071-most-dangerous-attack-on-pensions-yet

Source – http://www.paaflcio.org/?p=6704

Wolf says tax plan can pass Pa. House; vote scheduled Saturday

By Mary Wilson

– Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Wolf’s office said it has the votes in the state House to pass a tax package that could be the key to ending the state’s five-and-a-half-month budget impasse.

“We are confident that we have the votes to pass a final budget,” said spokesman Jeff Sheridan, “and we are hopeful that this is over soon.”

The announcement signals a major development for budget talks in the Republican-controlled House, where anti-tax sentiment threatened to take negotiations back to square one earlier this month.

House GOP leaders said they’ll hold the tax vote Saturday and work through the weekend on budget-related legislation.

The details of the tax plan are still a mystery.

“Nobody knows whether or not we’re going to go (personal income tax) or sales tax, or has any real specificity, besides rumors, about the rates,” said Rep. Mike Schlossberg, D-Lehigh.

The measure is expected to include some increase in the personal income tax, an expansion of the sales tax, and higher cigarette taxes.

“You know the game plan generally where it’s at,” said Rep. Seth Grove, R-York, who said he wouldn’t be supporting the tax plan rolled out for a vote.

Lawmakers are under increasing pressure from social services organizations and school districts that are cut off from their state funding due to the budget impasse. If it continues into the New Year, some schools have said they’ll have to close.

Some schools say if it continues into the New Year, they may have to close.

Source – http://www.newsworks.org/index.php/local/item/89310-wolf-says-tax-plan-can-pass-pa-house-vote-scheduled-saturday