How an 'Ineffective' Teacher Gets Third-Highest Pay Level
Law requires merit pay, but seniority and college credits actually set it
Pennfield Schools had just one teacher rated “ineffective” out of 124 within the Calhoun County district in 2014-15.
And that ineffective teacher’s salary of $68,921 was the third-highest salary for a teacher in the district, according to documents received in a Freedom of Information Act request and the state database of teacher salaries. Teachers in Michigan are evaluated and are given one of four ratings. “Ineffective” is the worst rating.
That teacher, whose name is being withheld from publication, is a good example of the problems with the union-negotiated one-size-fits-all pay scale that just about every district in the state follows.
Teachers in the unionized public schools of this state have their salary based solely on their years of service and the number of college credits earned.
A 2010 state law signed by then-Gov. Jennifer Granholm mandated school districts give top teachers merit pay, but many school districts ignore the law.
Michigan Education Association President Steve Cook recently complained about low teacher salaries in a Feb. 10 article in the Lansing-based MIRS News.
State Superintendent Brian Whiston agreed with Cook and said something had to be done with the starting pay for public school teachers. He added that schools have a problem attracting the “best and brightest” when starting pay for teachers is so low.
A report from the National Education Association said starting pay for teachers in Michigan was $35,901 in 2012-13, the most recent year data is available from the national teachers union.
But one expert who has written comprehensive handbooks for Michigan school boards said the salary of young teachers is determined by the unions, who are the ones complaining loudest about the pay scales they negotiated.
“Complaints from union officials about low salaries for teachers are an admission of the union’s own failure,” said Michael Van Beek, director of research for the Mackinac Center for Public Policy. “They’re the ones who negotiate for an outdated, rigid salary schedule that makes it difficult for schools to reward exceptional teachers with exceptional pay.”
Michigan Capitol Confidential is the news source produced by the Mackinac Center for Public Policy. Michigan Capitol Confidential reports with a free-market news perspective.
Time for Labor Unions to Collect their Own Dues
The on-going SEIU dues skim must end
Editor's Note: This piece was originally published by The Hill on February 7, 2017.
Pam Harris, an Illinois mom who made history as the lead plaintiff in a landmark U.S. Supreme Court case, has a simple message for President Donald Trump and Health and Human Services Secretary nominee Tom Price.
“End the dues skim once and for all.”
Harris, who receives a modest monthly Medicaid stipend to care for her disabled son Josh at home, faced an attempt by the Service Employees International Union in 2009 to unionize private caregivers like her.
While she was able to beat back the Big Labor’s campaign to turn homes into union workplaces and then win right-to-work privileges for providers nationwide in her 2014 legal case, the work isn’t done.
Labor organizations — primarily the SEIU — still siphon an estimated $200 million in Medicaid funds from more than 500,000 care providers in several states, enlisting government as a payments processor.
The Trump administration and its congressional partners need to act decisively to end this scheme. In doing so, they can redirect precious dollars back to where they were originally intended to go and away from thinly veiled political machines.
How this came about in the first place is a notorious story — some would say a devious act — in labor creativity.
Facing a long decline in private sector unionism, SEIU sought to regain ground by organizing home help workers. These people were private contractors who could be labeled as government workers, though only for collective bargaining purposes, because they received money through a government-administered aid program.
SEIU entrapped workers any way it could, using executive orders in Illinois, a ballot initiative in Washington, legislation in Minnesota and administrative action in Michigan. Once in place, the union directly skimmed a portion of the Medicaid reimbursement for its own purposes, including legislative and political interests, lavish executive compensation and even Christmas parties.
The scheme didn’t go unchallenged. Bob and Pat Haynes, Michigan parents of two disabled children, decided to stand up to SEIU. The Legislature banned the practice but not before SEIU collected $34 million from tens of thousands of caregivers. After care providers in Michigan were given a choice, the membership of SEIU Healthcare Michigan dropped by 80 percent.
Pam Harris joined the fight and with help from the National Right to Work Legal Foundation, took her challenge all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court. But her legal victory didn’t end the scheme decisively; it only gave caregivers the option to get out.
Many have exercised that option, but others remain in the dark about their rights because unions often impose labor neutrality clauses on state administrators, forbidding them to tell caregivers what they can do. So it’s often up to informal parent networks and nonprofit groups to spread the word.
SEIU has worked hard to hold its ill-gotten gains. In Washington state, SEIU put up nearly $2 million for a ballot measure so nonprofit advocates, like those from the Freedom Foundation, couldn’t contact caregivers about their rights, under the guise of protecting seniors from identity theft. The initiative passed with 70 percent of the vote.
What should be done?
The dues skim operates in government programs run by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services within the Department of Health and Human Services.
Once confirmed, Price should initiate a rule-making process to prohibit public agencies from spending federal funds to collect so-called dues or fees on behalf of labor organizations. Unions would no longer have the convenience of a government-collected dues deduction. Much like every other organization out there, they’d have to sell and administer the benefits of membership on their own time and dime.
Congress can augment this action by attaching an appropriations rider that prohibits Medicaid funds from being skimmed into union bank accounts.
If the experiences in Illinois, Michigan and other states are any guide, caregivers just want to take care of their clients and family members. No union – SEIU or otherwise – should be able to use the tools of government to put a hand in the cookie jar.
Michigan Capitol Confidential is the news source produced by the Mackinac Center for Public Policy. Michigan Capitol Confidential reports with a free-market news perspective.
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