Union In The News – Weekly Highlights
Union In The News – Weekly Highlights
Labor unions, environmentalists are biggest opponents of Gov. Brown’s affordable housing plan By Liam Dillion, May 24, 2016, The San Diego Union Tribune Powerful opponents have emerged to fight Gov. Jerry Brown’s plan to streamline affordable housing development — and their main reason isn’t about building homes. A coalition of labor and environmental organizations has come...
By Sean O’Striker
A Mostly Merry Month for Educational Choice
A Mostly Merry Month for Educational Choice
Those favoring educational freedom – and their enemies – have been busy in May. Overall, May has been a good month for the school choice movement despite a few lawsuits involving the teachers unions (so what else is new?). The Washington Education Association announced it would file suit by the end of the month challenging...
By Larry Sand
Union In The News – Weekly Highlights
Union In The News – Weekly Highlights
Millionaires Targeted in L.A. Tax Proposal to Ease Homelessness By James Nash, May 17, 2016, Bloomberg Los Angeles County leaders are turning to millionaires to pay for solutions to its growing homeless problem, part of a trend of state and local governments looking to raise income taxes on the highest wages. Supervisors in the county of...
By Sean O’Striker
Teacher Shortage Claim Is Still Short on Data
Teacher Shortage Claim Is Still Short on Data
No matter how many times it’s repeated, the national teacher shortage story is a canard. In the months since I last wrote about the alleged teacher shortage crisis, I had hoped the hysteria would abate. But alas, it hasn’t; if anything, it has increased, with the teachers unions at the forefront of the bogus story....
By Larry Sand
Union In The News – Weekly Highlights
Union In The News – Weekly Highlights
Farmworkers win court battle over access to California labor board’s proceedings By Geoffrey Mohan, May 10, 2016, Los Angeles Times A District Court of Appeal panel has revived a constitutional case involving public access to contract mediation proceedings held by the state’s farm labor watchdog. A farmworker and business owner now can air their case against...
By Sean O’Striker
Public Education Prospers in Wisconsin Without Union Interference
Public Education Prospers in Wisconsin Without Union Interference
Despite what the teachers unions say, teachers – not to mention children and taxpayers – can and do thrive without them. In 2011, under Governor Scott Walker’s leadership, Wisconsin passed Act 10, the Budget Repair Bill, which, among other things, placed strict limitations on the ability of teachers unions to collectively bargain. Walker very quickly...
By Larry Sand
California Democrats Kill Union Transparency Bills After CPA Exposes SEIU Spending
California Democrats Kill Union Transparency Bills After CPA Exposes SEIU Spending
Assemblywoman Shannon Grove’s fight for public union employees who have been battling the Service Employees International Union for transparency was stilted Wednesday when Democrats killed two bills aimed at opening unions’ books, and allowing more frequent votes on union representation. After several years of nasty legal battles with the SEIU to see where dues money...
By Katy Grimes
Union In The News – Weekly Highlights
Union In The News – Weekly Highlights
Faculty Union Approves Proposed CSU Contract By City News Service, May 3, 2016, KPBS Members of the California Faculty Association, including instructors at San Diego State and Cal State San Marcos, overwhelmingly approved a proposed contract with California State University that would give them 10.5 percent raises over three years, the union announced Tuesday. The proposal...
By Sean O’Striker
Unionize the Personal Assistants to the One-tenth-of-one-percenters
Unionize the Personal Assistants to the One-tenth-of-one-percenters
It came as a shock to learn that some of those who were around when unions first started infiltrating local and state governments actually welcomed the process. These were the days when unions were driving jobs overseas because of their unwillingness to negotiate new contracts in the face of foreign competition. “Let them come,” some...
By Edward Ring
The Latest Teachers Unions’ Monopoly Moves
The Latest Teachers Unions’ Monopoly Moves
April revealed the teachers unions’ desperation over losing control of top-down, one-size fits all government-run schools. In many ways April was normal for teacher union monopolists. Early in the month, the Washington Teachers Union said it would challenge a new law in the Evergreen State that corrected problems in the way that charter schools, which...
By Larry Sand
Union In The News – Weekly Highlights
Union In The News – Weekly Highlights
$15 Minimum Wage Sends California Businesses Fleeing By Connor D. Wolf, April 26, 2016, Daily Caller California businesses are already starting to move out of state less than a month after lawmakers raised the minimum wage to $15 an hour, according to reports Monday. California beat New York by a couple hours April 4 to become...
By Sean O’Striker
Let’s Deep-six Prop. 30
Let’s Deep-six Prop. 30
The signatures for an initiative that would extend 2012’s “temporary” tax increase in California are due today. Four years ago Californians voted in Prop. 30, a “temporary” tax, to pay back schools “from the years of devastating cuts.” But as I show here, there was hardly any devastation; in fact, our spending had continued to...
By Larry Sand
Union In The News – Weekly Highlights
Union In The News – Weekly Highlights
Calif. Grower Interfered With Union Election By Elizabeth Warmerdam, April 19, 2016, Courthouse News Service California’s farm labor board upheld a ruling that the state’s largest tree fruit grower interfered with its employees’ election on whether to decertify the United Farm Workers as their union representative. The Agricultural Labor Relations Board voted unanimously Friday to uphold...
By Sean O’Striker
Union In The News – Weekly Highlights
Union In The News – Weekly Highlights
The real costs of minimum wage hikes By Norm Groot, April 12, 2016, The Salinas Californian Just this past week, our governor and Democratic legislators reached a compromise on the state’s minimum wage, mostly to avoid a costly ballot initiative fight precipitated by the unions that was due to occur this fall. While we all...
By Sean O’Striker