Union President Reveals Truth
I am late talking about this, but it is still noteworthy because of who gave this speech. It was given by Morty Rosenfeld, President of the Plainview-Old Bethpage Congress of Teachers. The speech entitled Telling What We Know was given on 10/17/2005. (Hat tip: Kevin Killion of the Illinois Loop. Both CRAFT and Extreme Wisdom have discussed this issue as well. )
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Telling What We Know |
Finally, a member of Big Ed is willing to stand up and tell the truth about what is happening in public education. The costs are “ever inflating”, standards are declining, and students are “ill equipped”, and lack “basic skills”. This is what many people have been saying and have known for years. I am very happy to see someone on the inside finally saying it.
Let’s look at the excuses he sheds more light on as well.
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Excuse number one – We don’t have enough money to meet the educational needs of our students. While too many of our school districts do need more financial resources, resources that many find impossible to raise trough the regressive property tax, the fact of the matter is too many of them also waste a substantial portion of what they have, a good piece of the waste mandated by state and federal law. I’ve written elsewhere about the administrative bloat in school districts where level upon level of bureaucracy insures that teachers and educational support staff are over scrutinized and under supervised to the point where teaching innovation and imagination are increasingly giving way to the routines of educational programs, particularly in math and English, that are intended to make teaching thinking-free. We have program upon program upon program. Can anyone seriously say that our students know more and are more skilled than they used to be? With entrepreneurial aplomb some crafty educators have gone corporate, developing and skillfully marketing programs for everything from mathematics to values education. School districts employ large numbers of central office administrators who then turn around and hire consultants who often come selling their programmatic wares. Where are the NEA and AFT to challenge this pentagon-like waste in our schools? |
Districts and bureaucracies waste money. They are too top heavy and have too many levels. They have become bloated and inefficient to the point that skills are not being properly taught to our children. Mr. Rosenfeld appears to blame mandates for much of the waste and financial shortcomings and asks why the NEA and AFT aren’t fighting these mandates. Mr. Rosenfeld, they are the cause of most of these mandates. They are part of the problem and not part of the solution. I do congratulate you on heading in the right direction, but you need to open your eyes wider and see the unions for what they are. They are the machinery that lobbies the State and Federal legislators to create these mandates. Take a look at this excerpt from the Illinois Federation of Teachers. They actually state they will oppose any reduction in mandates. If you get the NEA and the AFT to actually care about our kids and educating them again you will have made a dramatic difference in the lives of millions of kids.
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The IFT will continue to oppose: * Tax and spending limitations which curtail and/or obstruct educational and social services |
Mr. Rosenfeld wants to talk about property taxes and how schools are funded. He sees a taxpayer revolt that is spreading throughout the country.
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Meanwhile, over forty school districts on Long Island defeated their school budgets last spring. Pressed by ever-escalating property taxes, citizens were in revolt. That revolt, I fear, will spread as the middle class in the United States is squeezed more and more by a taxation system designed by and for the rich and an economy that increasingly is either exporting or abolishing the good jobs that used to support a comfortable middle class life. If education unions do not become outspoken advocates for economy in our schools, they will find taxpayers increasingly revolting against them. |
I would love to know how he would change the tax system so it was not for the rich. I am assuming by his comments that he means we need to tax the rich more and give it to the poor. This does not work Mr. Rosenfeld; it destroys innovation just like bureaucracy does. It will lead to even more problems than we have today. Just take a look at the chart over at Extreme Wisdom showing how tax cuts and job creation legislation will greatly increase our economy and creates wealth for people who are free to innovate and get the reward for their work. If you overtax and take away the incentive to work hard and innovate, you will destroy this country and drive more people into poverty.
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Surely some of the budget defeats on Long Island were aided by the local newspaper’s articles on teachers earning over one hundred thousand dollars a year. |
It can’t be, teachers making a $100,000 a year. I thought they were all underpaid. That is what the unions keep telling us. We all know this to be true. The teachers at this end of the pay scale are some of those that get rewarded the most at each new contract signing while those newly entering the profession are the ones hurt by their outrageous salaries.
