Forum: The Future of Faculty Unions
Reprint of 2011 article in light of current events
Reprint of 2011 article in light of current events
We are happy to announce that PERB ruled in favor of the Union's position for members of the IAPP and OTBS units. It is illegal for BUSD to deduct overpayments from wages owed to the district without the member's agreement. The California labor code now applies to recoupment of monies owed to the district. The member will need to agree to a voluntary repayment schedule. Former president Tim Donnelly worked hard on this for over four years. His efforts are appreciated!
For members of the OSS Unit, section 11.6 Overpayments and Payroll Errors still applies.
To read current finding of PERB, click on the following link.
Noah includes himself as one of those liberals “who spent too much time beating up unions,” as he told me recently. (He and I are both members of the informal Washington Monthly alumni society.) His thinking began to change in the early 1990s when he read “Which Side Are You On?” It is a powerful meditation on the difficulties unions face, written by Thomas Geoghegan, a Chicago labor lawyer. Researching “The Great Divergence” reinforced Noah’s growing view that when liberals turned their backs on unions — when they put, in his words, “identity politics over economic justice” — they made a terrible mistake.
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/06/05/opinion/nocera-turning-our-backs-on-unions.html?src=me&ref=general
Members from Chapter 41 at University of North Dakota and Chapter 42 at North Dakota State University have competed for two months to see which group could recruit the most members in that time. At stake was $500 and the "NDPEA I-29 Traveling Coffee Mug Trophy."
Click here to find out who won, and what you can do to build on their success.
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Welcome to summer break! I want to take a brief moment to share some of the frustrations our certificated, and to a lesser extent, the classified negotiating teams have faced at the bargaining table this year. To summarize the situation, the District wants to take furlough days even though our District has a large ending balance and the governor is promising an increased baseline budget for K-12 in his May revise. On top of all that, the District wants to take furlough days even if the tax measure passes in fall.
North Dakota Public Employees Association staff and members are teaming up with American Federation of Teachers volunteers from across the country to go door-to-door on the week of June 3-9, spreading the word on why we should VOTE NO on Measure 2. Click here for more information.
Margaret Rodrigues' guest column for the Morgan Hill Times offers words of wisdom from Dr. Seuss for our new graduates. It also challenges the new graduates to seek out a mentor who helped them in their education and to give back to their community. Lastly, this article encourages non-graduating seniors to keep working to reach their goals.
On Tuesday, May 29, 2012 at the meeting of the HCRC, John Ripley was named the new chair of the committee. The committee serves as the bargaining agent for Baltimore County employees' healthcare benefits under each of the MOU for the six bargaining unions and SMC (supervisory, managerial & Confidential group). This is the first time since the committee has been formed that the president of the Fire union hasn't been the chair. It is John's committment to the employees of Baltimore County that has lead to this opportunity. John fortitude will be tested immediately since the county has presented changes to the committee already and tied them to the ratification of new MOU's.