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Wisconsin is seeing success


Posted: Jul 1, 2011

I'm guessing this may get some of our friends on the left fired up. Here you go.Surprised It sounds like the kids are actually the winners here. Sweet. 

Union curbs rescue a Wisconsin school district

"This is a disaster," said Mark Miller, the Wisconsin Senate Democratic leader, in February after Republican Gov. Scott Walker proposed a budget bill that would curtail the collective bargaining powers of some public employees. Miller predicted catastrophe if the bill were to become law -- a charge repeated thousands of times by his fellow Democrats, union officials, and protesters in the streets.

Now the bill is law, and we have some very early evidence of how it is working. And for one beleaguered Wisconsin school district, it's a godsend, not a disaster.

The Kaukauna School District, in the Fox River Valley of Wisconsin near Appleton, has about 4,200 students and about 400 employees. It has struggled in recent times and this year faced a deficit of $400,000. But after the law went into effect, at 12:01 a.m. Wednesday, school officials put in place new policies they estimate will turn that $400,000 deficit into a $1.5 million surplus. And it's all because of the very provisions that union leaders predicted would be disastrous.

In the past, teachers and other staff at Kaukauna were required to pay 10 percent of the cost of their health insurance coverage and none of their pension costs. Now, they'll pay 12.6 percent of the cost of their coverage (still well below rates in much of the private sector) and also contribute 5.8 percent of salary to their pensions. The changes will save the school board an estimated $1.2 million this year, according to board President Todd Arnoldussen.

Of course, Wisconsin unions had offered to make benefit concessions during the budget fight. Wouldn't Kaukauna's money problems have been solved if Walker had just accepted those concessions and not demanded cutbacks in collective bargaining powers?

"The monetary part of it is not the entire issue," says Arnoldussen, a political independent who won a spot on the board in a nonpartisan election. Indeed, some of the most important improvements in Kaukauna's outlook are because of the new limits on collective bargaining.

In the past, Kaukauna's agreement with the teachers union required the school district to purchase health insurance coverage from something called WEA Trust -- a company created by the Wisconsin teachers union. "It was in the collective bargaining agreement that we could only negotiate with them," says Arnoldussen. "Well, you know what happens when you can only negotiate with one vendor." This year, WEA Trust told Kaukauna that it would face a significant increase in premiums.

Now, the collective bargaining agreement is gone, and the school district is free to shop around for coverage. And all of a sudden, WEA Trust has changed its position. "With these changes, the schools could go out for bids, and lo and behold, WEA Trust said, 'We can match the lowest bid,'" says Republican state Rep. Jim Steineke, who represents the area and supports the Walker changes. At least for the moment, Kaukauna is staying with WEA Trust, but saving substantial amounts of money.

Then there are work rules. "In the collective bargaining agreement, high school teachers only had to teach five periods a day, out of seven," says Arnoldussen. "Now, they're going to teach six." In addition, the collective bargaining agreement specified that teachers had to be in the school 37 1/2 hours a week. Now, it will be 40 hours.

The changes mean Kaukauna can reduce the size of its classes -- from 31 students to 26 students in high school and from 26 students to 23 students in elementary school. In addition, there will be more teacher time for one-on-one sessions with troubled students. Those changes would not have been possible without the much-maligned changes in collective bargaining.

Teachers' salaries will stay "relatively the same," Arnoldussen says, except for higher pension and health care payments. (The top salary is around $80,000 per year, with about $35,000 in additional benefits, for 184 days of work per year -- summers off.) Finally, the money saved will be used to hire a few more teachers and institute merit pay.

It is impossible to overstate how bitter and ugly the Wisconsin fight has been, and that bitterness and ugliness continues to this day with efforts to recall senators and an unseemly battle inside the state Supreme Court. But the new law is now a reality, and Gov. Walker recently told the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel that the measure will gain acceptance "with every day, week and month that goes by that the world doesn't fall apart."

In the Kaukauna schools, the world is not only not falling apart -- it's getting better.

Byron York, The Examiner's chief political correspondent, can be contacted at byork@washingtonexaminer.com. His column appears on Tuesday and Friday, and his stories and blogposts appear on ExaminerPolitics.com.

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Not the winner in the long run - the issue was - bargaining RIGHTS.

[ In Reply To ..]
The issue was not specific contracts. Many of the contracts were already agreed upon before the bill taking away citizen rights was passed. I don't have time to check into this contract, but it was probably already agreed upon. Within a couple of years, those Republicans who are so insistent upon taking away citizen rights and giving it all to the Koch brothers and corporations will be voted out.

bargaining/citizen rights - dnh

[ In Reply To ..]
could someone please explain to me - why is collective bargaining a "right" and where it is defined as such? Collective bargaining is (or was) a privilege -one that has been destroyed by unions who have long been busy lining the pockets of their leaders while not really serving the workers.

Success in Wisconsin? - mbmt

[ In Reply To ..]
There are a few things that were left out of this article. It all sounds wonderful until you start thinking about what stripping collective bargaining rights actually means. You already know how I feel about that (husband was a public school teacher). If teachers are paying more for health insurance, more toward their pensions, and working more hours, they are actually taking a pay cut. Also, teachers are not paid in most cases for extra hours they put in (parent-teacher conferences, various meetings, etc.). Those extra hours they put in are all part of their salaries. There is no 40-hour work week for teachers (often a lot more unpaid hours). Governor Walker and his cronies want everyone to think that the stripping of collective bargaining rights from public workers was necessary. Since when is it okay to punish middle class workers? They are not the problem. Who do you think is really benefiting from stripping nearly all collective bargaining rights from public employees? Since most bargaining rights have nothing to do with money, who stands to gain from this? I will give you a hint...not the kids.

Which Wisconsin? - On what planet?

[ In Reply To ..]
OK, so we have teachers contributing 8.4% more of their paychecks toward benefits and creating a surplus where a shortfall once was, a concession they had offered to do before the law was passed. This means the credit for the surplus goes to the teachers who made the concessions, and not the law itself.

Then we have the WEA saying they can match the lowest bids once they are subjected to a competitive process. Of course they can. When the focus is shifted from the quality of benefits to the reducing the bottom line, how do you suppose they get there? Nothing is mentioned in the article to indicate that they would be providing the same coverage. Deductibles will go up, choice will be restricted as will covered services. We are talking private insurance here. That's just the way it works. We have all experienced this in the MTSO world. What makes you think it is any different in that setting, especially when their collective bargaining rights for their benefits have been stripped? Duh. Truth be told, we can credit the law for teachers getting smaller paychecks now and weaker benefits in the near future.

The changes in required classroom hours means that the mountains of paperwork (grading, recording, and generating requisite state and federal reports), daily and weekly coursework and classroom preparation (lecture preparation, hand-out study sheets, tests, quizzes, special projects, textbook reviews, homework assignments, etc) that teachers do in those hours spent out of the classroom while still ON the clock will now be taken home where it all will be done OFF the clock. Oh, and that one-on-one time claim? The reality is that many teachers already were doing that after dismissal along with targeted special needs tutoring, study halls, and detentions when needed. Fact is this means less time for that, not more, since the extra 2 1/2 hours cannot be used as described above and they will now have to take the work home and do it for no pay.

Not mentioned in the article is how this will cut into teachers’ family time (retrieving their own kids from school, attending their extracurricular activities, preparing dinner, supervising homework, bath and bedtime supervision etc). There was a reason for the 37-1/2 hour work week. This nickel and diming teachers time-wise and reducing class size by adding required classroom time does not benefits students nearly as much as it does the state since it will allow them to kick the can down the road in terms of building new schools to accommodate overcrowding.

Conspicuously absent from this report is the $900 million in education funding cuts in Walker’s brilliant budget proposal, which kinda tends to suck the oxygen clean out of this Washington Examiner's sunshine and lollipops distortion. Scott Walker's pipe dream of gradual acceptance only goes to show how he is just as delusional as he always has been. Guess he hasn’t noticed the recalls are just around the corner and we are at 185 days and counting. Tick tock.

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