Commentary:
For Randi Weingarten, It’s Been a Very Good Month
by
Stuart Dunn
On
April 12, Mayor Giuliani announced the completion of contract
negotiations with District Council 37. According to the NY Times,
the contract calls for a four percent increase retroactive to
April 1, 2000, another increase of four percent retroactive to
April 1, 2001, and an increase of one percent, which the district
council’s locals can distribute in any way they want. Most members
will receive an additional three percent by reducing their pension
contributions without decreasing their pensions. The contract,
which expires in June 2002, requires no productivity increases
to offset these pay increases.
Randi Weingarten, President of the UFT, immediately announced
that the District 37 contract should not serve as a pattern for
her union. In private, I expect she jumped for joy. The Mayor,
who had made merit-pay the central condition for his bargaining
with the city’s unions, came away with the acknowledgment that
the city had the right under this agreement to pay additional
compensation to employees for outstanding performance—some merit-pay
agreement. If the teachers can get a similar provision Ms. Weingarten
will be a happy camper.
This announcement was followed by a conference entitled, Exemplary
Educational Practices, Labor/Management Issues. It is unusual
for a Chief Executive to attend such a conference during contract
negotiations, and even more unusual to call for significant salary
increases for his employees, but that is exactly what Schools
Chancellor Harold Levy did. This conference turned out to be a
big love-in, except for the Mayor’s contribution. It is now clear
that the Chancellor supports the union position that the teachers
should receive a large, across-the-board salary increase. His
argument is that this will make NYC competitive in the hiring
and retention of quality teachers. He neglects the fact that all
the other school districts are calling for similar increases,
which if achieved, would leave NYC exactly where it started, except
that it would have a bigger bill to pay.
The UFT view is that the teachers deserve a big increase. I don’t
know what the teachers deserve, the “just wage” having gone out
with the Middle Ages. However, if it takes higher salaries to
hire and retain high quality teachers, NYC will have to pay higher
salaries. But, it must be sure it is paying these salaries for
high quality teaching. The only way I know of to achieve this
is through pay-for-performance. The role of the union is to negotiate
a merit pool; management should determine how that money is distributed.
At the same conference, Bob Chase of the NEA, said, “salaries
are a quality issue.” I think that should read, “quality is a
salary issue.” It is to be hoped that the Mayor will insist on
a real merit-pay contract, and that the candidates for mayor will
not so desire the support of the UFT that they will undercut the
negotiation.
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