Collective Bargaining Wins on MLK Day

Martin Luther King leaning on a lectern. Deuts...

Collective bargaining has been demonized and weakened by Michigan Republicans in the past year.  In fact, Republicans seemed poised to try to kill collective bargaining all together this year with “right-to-work” legislation.  However, collective bargaining continues to prove that it works, and lets hope that right will prevail over wrong this calendar year. 

As proof that collective bargaining works, take a look at the Pine River Area Schools district.  This past year collective bargaining brought about a 28% reduction in the cost of insurance.  That is better than the 20% savings that districts got when the Governor circumvented the collective bargaining process with a mandated 20% insurance contribution.  Collective bargaining can also bring about changes that are not monetary in nature.  In Pine River, the process brought about the observance of Martin Luther King Jr. day thanks to the work of one dedicated teacher.

Tiyi Shippers, an elementary music teacher, set out on a mission to get the school district to observe MLK day after a student suggested the day wasn’t observed because of a lack of tolerance in the community.  Mrs. Shippers spoke with the school board and then with the teachers union about her concerns.  After an overwhelming vote of support by the teachers union, the negotiating team bargained for the day off as part of a new contract.  Less than a year after Mrs. Shipper’s began her quest, she stood in a library that was anything but silent.  The noise of sewing machines and the voices of over 100 people filled the room as they turned pillow cases into dresses for women in Haiti.  Elsewhere in the community kids were helping shovel driveways and collecting canned goods for a local food pantry.  All around Martin Luther King’s message of service to others was being put in action.  

None of what happened in Pine River would have happened without collective bargaining.  Collective bargaining encourages people to work together to solve common problems.  It empowers people to make improvements in their work place.  It should be no surprise that Martin Luther King Jr. was a proponent of collective bargaining.  He called the “right-to-work” agenda a “fraud” that must “be stopped.”  Today we honor Dr. King’s memory, this year we need to honor his message by stopping the “right-to-work” for less legislation.

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Republicans Use “Guiding Principles” Publication to Slam Teachers Again.

 If you read the House Republican’s Guiding Principles publication, you will see the words “job” or “jobs” fifty-one times.  Republicans claim they are “looking out for the job seeker and the job creator.”  If you move to the education section, the tone changes.  The publication states that “the education system should not be about the adults and their careers.”  So I guess “careers” are bad and “jobs” are good.  Is that because “careers” typically pay a living wage and offer benefits, whereas “jobs” typically can offer underemployment and a near minimum wage?  I guess I should just be happy that educators are referred to as adults, and not the “yelling and screaming” “kids”  that Republican Representative Phil Potvin has called them.  However, I’m still not satisfied.  Why shouldn’t education be in part about the professionals who work in the field?  Many studies, like this one, show that inside the classroom the teacher is the main factor in student learning.  So it seems counterintuitive that Republicans would target educators like they did in 2012.

The Republican’s “Guiding Principles” also states that “teachers, administrators, parents, and students all agree that the (education) system needs significant reforms.”  Really?  Where is the study that allowed Republicans to jump to that assumption?  Are the “reforms” everyone is asking for the partisan reforms that were pushed through in 2011? I have the pleasure of working with teachers, administrators, parents, and students everyday.  I don’t hear them asking for cuts to school funding, cuts to teacher compensation, and implementation of teacher evaluation tools that no one has tested and no one understands.  I hear them asking for more teachers, more counselors, more computers, and newer text books.  It seems like they are asking for more resources.  However, I’ll admit I haven’t been able to find the Republican’s study in order to better understand the evidence that supports their agenda.  Truthfully, I suspect that no such study exists.  What I suspect even more is that the Republicans have been listening to the right wing special interest groups The Mackinac Center for Public Policy and the DeVos school privatization front group The Great Lakes Education Project.  In other words, it is business as usual in Lansing.  I did wholeheartedly agree with one principle listed in the publication.  I believe Republicans should “lead responsibly in all our endeavors, making state government answerable to the public and respectful of its wishes.”  I cannot wait until the Republicans implement this principle.

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Michigan Needs a Graduated Income Tax

 
Tax

It is 2012, a new tax year, and in Michigan the beginning of a free ride for two thirds of businesses in Michigan.  Thanks to Governor Snyder, and his fellow business owners, I mean Republicans, only businesses organized as “C” corporations will have to pay Michigan taxes.  What makes this change particularly bad in Michigan is that we are one of only 7 states with a flat income tax.  So when wealthy business owners like the owners of Biggby Coffee pay taxes on what they bring home from that business, it will be at the same rate as the school kid serving up the coffee they make.  Does anyone still wonder why there is a movement against the 1% in America? There should also be a movement against a flat tax as well.

The flat tax became part of Michigan’s Constitution in 1963.  Efforts to repeal the flat tax have failed three times, with the last attempt occurring in 1976.  The Michigan Chamber of Commerce helped defeat those issues, and their opposition is more evidence to me that repealing the flat tax is what is right for Michigan.  I believe this should be the next big petition drive once the Repeal Public Act 4 (Emergency Financial Manager) petition drive finishes up.  This could also be a good cause for the Occupy Michigan movement to rally around.  If we are to keep the tax breaks for businesses, lets make sure that the people who benefit the most from the free ride chip in more for the trip.

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The Problem with Prisoners vs. Students.

English: Concertina razor wire at a prison

Last May Ithica Public School’s Superintendent Nathan Bootz wrote a letter to Governor Snyder that was printed in the Gratiot County Hearld.  Someone copied that letter into an email and soon after it went viral.  Mr. Bootz’s letter was discussed in the traditional media and also in many blogs like this one.  If you missed it somehow, the letter basically asked the Governor to treat students the same as prisoners.  While the Governor was cutting per pupil tuition to less that than $7,000 a year, the cost of imprisoning a person remained between $30,000 and $40,000 a year according to Mr. Bootz’s letter.  

First of all, I admire the courage of Mr. Bootz.  Too many superintendents have been afraid to take action on behalf of their students.  This lack of action by many superintendents has left teachers with the duty of educating the legislature and the public.  The problem with this scenario is that many Republicans in the legislature discount the opinion of teachers because most are members of a union.  Legislators do listen to superintendents though, and Mr. Bootz’s letter was effective in bringing attention to the education funding debate.   

I agree with Mr. Bootz’ssuggestion that properly equipping and funding Michigan’s public schools would prevent some people from falling through the cracks and entering the prison system.  Yes, that would save a lot of money down the road.   However, the only way to save a lot of money in the short term, in either the prison system or in the education system, is to take it out of the hide of the workers.  Since the largest expense in both prisons and schools is the cost of the people who work there, money can only be saved by reductions in jobs, reduction in hours, and reduction in compensation.   As one prison employee said to me recently, they are trying to “pit us against each other” in this debate.  The “us” being workers against workers instead of workers against those who want to employee workers for less and less.  

When we look at prison funding, let us consider treating the problem (too many prisoners) rather than the symptom (too much cost).  Besides prevention through quality public education, we need better rehabilitation programs (education, counseling, job skill training) and quality jobs for those who are successfully rehabilitated.  We should also reconsider any law that puts people in prison for non-violent offenses. 

When we look at education funding, let us consider our priorities.  If we want to help children succeed, we need to properly fund public education.  Proper funding ensures small class sizes, adequate materials and supplies, sufficient professional development for staff, time for teachers to design and plan lessons, and compensation that would entice quality people to enter the profession.  We also need to make sure that kids don’t start school behind, which is all too common for children who grow up in poverty. 

What won’t help the education system, the prison system, or Michigan’s economy is an argument that pits workers against workers.  What workers should do is unite against tax cuts for wealthy business owners at the expense of the rest of Michiganders.  What is good for the few, is not good for the many.  The problem is, too many of our elected officials are part of the few.

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Banned by the Cadillac News!

I live just outside Cadillac.  I grew up there, went to high school there, and spend most of my money there.  I am a subscriber and avid reader of the Cadillac News.  The Cadillac News does a great job of covering local news stories. They also have a very active “Speak Out” section.  In that section, they have always posted my left leaning rants along with rants from people from all across the political continuum.  I guess my most recent letter crossed the line.  I was told that it “doesn’t fit our guidelines regarding private business.”  You see, private businesses are exempt from public criticism (and pretty soon taxes).  I think we all know the rationale behind this rule.  Thankfully we have the internet that allows for freedom of speech without “guidelines.”  I hope you enjoy the following banned letter to the editor.

I read in the Cadillac News that Fox Motors is collecting backpacks and school supplies for “local public schools.”  I believe that is a nice gesture and I hope many of you will donate.  However, I think readers should know that the owner of Fox Motors is Dan DeVos.  Mr. DeVos donated $5,000 to an organization known as the Great Lakes Education Project (GLEP).  The GLEP is primarily funded by Dan’s brother and sister in-law Dick and Betsy DeVos.  Those two have given the organization almost $900,000.  The GLEP have been using these donations to help elect conservative candidates that support using tax dollars for private schools.  The GLEP did not endorse Governor Snyder, but one Richard Snyder did donate $2,000 to the GLEP in 2006.  Snyder’s plan for public schools features multiple ways that tax dollars can be used for private instruction.  Governor Snyder and the DeVos family seem to have little regard for the voter’s wishes.  After all, the people of Michigan resoundingly defeated  the voucher initiative in the fall of 2000.  So back to Fox Motors.  I’m sure that many quality people work there.  We own three 3 Fords vehicles.  I fully support buying Michigan made and locally sold products.  However, I have come to realize that politics is more about raising money than courting voters.  My power is in my wallet, and it is not my voter I.D. card.  I cannot spend my money in places that will use their profits for causes I strongly oppose.  How about you?

UPDATE:  The editor of the Cadillac News sent me a followup letter explaining why private entities get different treatment:  “Our policy is in place because of libel laws. We, and letter writers too, are more vulnerable to libel lawsuits in regards to private businesses and individuals than government and political groups.”

Posted in Great Lakes Education Project | Leave a comment

The Usual Suspects

Someone who follows Michigan politics but doesn’t watch Off the Record is akin to a sports fan that doesn’t watch Sportscenter. In the July 29th edition of the show, host Tim Skubick discussed the Representative Paul Scott recall effort. Representative Scott’s recall has been backed by the Michigan Education Association (MEA). The MEA is very active in recruiting volunteers and they are also spending money on the effort. Paul Scott is the chair of the House Education Committee where many of the recent anti-teaching bills originated, and the MEA sees him as a bit of a turncoat. The interesting thing about the recall is that there are now robocalls going out asking people not to sign the petitions.  Tim Skubic suggested that the Great Lakes Education Project (GLEP) could  be behind the robocalls. The GLEP is a DeVos initiative that I wrote quite extensively about and they have paid for robocalls before. Wealthy people like the DeVos family use front organizations like the GLEP to promote their brand of ultra-conservatism. These type of organizations have been successful in using soundbites to sway public opinion.  Those opposed to the GLEP’s message seldom link the organizations to those who fund it. In fact, many people who oppose the GLEP and the DeVos family plan for Michigan public schools run right out and purchase products from DeVos family companies like Fox Motors and Amway.  The DeVos family then donates some of the money they make to attack the jobs of the very people who purchase from them. If the GLEP is behind these robocalls, we will likely see this information on their PAC disclosure statements sometime in the future. However, the people receiving these calls right now will probably never know who was behind them. Whether you agree with the recall or not, at least the MEA is being upfront about their role rather than using zombie organizations like the GLEP.  Personally, I like to be on the side of transparency.

Posted in DeVos Family, Great Lakes Education Project | Leave a comment

The Children are Leaving, the Children are Leaving!

Governor Snyder, and his town criers (a.k.a. your elected officials), tell us that one of their top priorities is to stop college graduates from leaving the state.  In 2007, the last year I could find hard data on, the state lost about 18,000 college graduates.  In the past decade, Michigan is the only state to lose population.  Detroit suffered the largest lost with a drop of over 237,000 residents.  The state as a whole only netted a loss of around 55,000.  Governor Snyder doesn’t seem too concerned about the loss of urban citizens.  However, he is concerned about the loss of college graduates and likes to use the issue as justification for his record breaking business tax cut.

While jobs are an important factor in the “should I stay or should I go” decision, they are but one factor.  A recent study showed that one third of people who left the state had a job offer in the state.  Perhaps they chose to leave for better weather or for other lifestyle choices.  A study by Michigan College Foundation confirmed that 90% of soon to be college graduates want a stable economy and a good job.  However, 94% wanted to live in an affordable area, something Michigan is known for.  About 84% wanted strong K-12 schools and lifetime learning opportunities (i.e. colleges), areas in which Snyder has made cuts.  Some 83% of people wanted a safe area to live in.  Snyder’s cut to revenue sharing for cities will mean less pubic safety workers and he has also made cuts to the Michigan Sate Police.  About 82% of respondents wanted a vibrant community, 77% wanted after hour opportunities, and 76% wanted to live in a place that had quality transportation and that is easy to navigate.  For these things Snyder has no plan.

There is another way to boost Michigan’s population of college educated workers.  We can do better than 35th in the country in the number of college graduates.  One way would be to invest in K-12 education so more students are prepared for college.  However, the Governor favors cuts to K-12 education.  So the option of making college more affordable for those who are prepared seems reasonable.  However, Snyder also cut funding for colleges and universities which means large tuition increases are on the way.   A radical proposal like making college free for every student with good grades by adding as little as  1 cent to the sales tax would be out of the question I’m sure.  After all, that would be a tax that would effect everyone proportionally, something Snyder seems to be against.

So we know Snyder ingores much of the data on why college graduates leave the state.  We also know he is missing out on opportunities to address that very problem he seems to be so concerned about.  But get this.  Snyder also ignores some important data on how to create the jobs.  A recent study shows that the states that have made the biggest spending cuts have the weakest economies.   Yet more spending cuts is just what the Governor has prescribed! 

Snyder is a self proclaimed nerd.  People who consider themselves nerds are really good, or even great, at a understanding a certain subject or discipline.  They tend to fixate on that thing, be it computers, math, astronomy, etc.  They come to understand and master every component of it.   However, Governor Snyder does not seem to fully understand the one thing he is fixated on, job creation.  How can this be?  I guess the voters wanted a nerd but all they got was this dork!

Posted in Business, Taxes | 2 Comments

What He Said!

In a previous post, I discussed 102nd Representative Phil Potvin’s blow-up printed in the Big Rapids Pioneer.  Jim Crees, the editor of the Osceola Edition of the Pioneer, took offense to Potvin’s bullying of teachers in a very well written editorial.  Thankfully, Mr. Cress gave me permission to reprint his thoughts.  Enjoy.

     Well . .. well . . . well . . .
     The problems of the old just keep coming back to those damn teachers.
     Those leeches.  Those gold diggers.  Those . . . those . . .teachers.
     Around the state and nation, some members of the GOP have found a great way to shift responsibility for the woes of the world from their own . . .um . . . er interestingly opportunistic fiscal reform policies, to somebody else: Teachers, (and their union of course).
     Teachers and the unions have somehow become the root of all financial evil in this state and around the country.
     Funny thing is, while all kinds of commentators and conservative talking heads spot all kinds of crap about teachers and the unions, most politicians kinda dummy up when they head home.
     Except Phil Potvin.
     In a recent legislative meeting held in Big Rapids, Rep. Potvin produced some interesting, (if not educating), statements.
     Quoted in the Big Rapids Pioneer, Potvin ‘took off’ on the Michigan Education Association.  “That’s been the biggest frustration for me, as your representative, is to think we’re on the same team, yet we’re constantly being beaten up by these people.” he said.  
     “It’s kind of like one of your kids coming to you and yelling and screaming at you, saying, ‘Dad, I want my allowance.’ – ‘What do you mean you want your allowance?  You haven’t emptied the basket, you haven’t mowed the grass and I sure don’t appreciate your language and your attitude.”
     Really Phil?
     “…beat up by these people…”
     Beat up?  These people?
     Which people, Phil?  Who are “these people?”
     People who work and live in your district?
     People worried about school budgets and education funding?
     Who are you talking about?
     Are you claiming teachers aren’t “emptying the basket” or “mowing the lawn,” Phil?
     In his now famous editorial, Frosty Troy of the Oklahoma Observer wrote:
     “The crescendo of calumny heaped on public education by the likes of Cal Thomas, Rush Limbaugh, Newt Gingrich, and other politicos is a partisan attack.  They promote vouchers and charter schools-the desegregation of America, this time along class lines.
     “Who is for spiritual values for kids and who is just kidding?  Can you name one other institution that comes nearer to biblical injunctions than public schools?
     Feeding the hungry?  Last year, for nearly 30 percent of public school children, a school lunch was the only hot meal they got.
     Clothing the naked?  There’s hardly an elementary school in a poor neighborhood in America that does not have a clothing closet stuffed with underwear, socks, and other necessities for have-not children.
     The widow’s mite?  The average teacher spent more than $400 of personal funds for such things as workbooks and pencils for poor children.
     Role models?  No other profession provides a higher percentage of Sunday school teachers.
    Suffer the little ones?  Who takes millions of of little ones who are retarded, developmentally disabled, or mentally handicapped?  Who redeems the dispossessed and the delinquent in alternative education programs?
     Look who comes to public school . . .
     Six million for whom English is a second language.
     Six million special education children.
     More than two million abused children.
     Nearly 500,000 from no permanent address.
     One out of four comes from extreme poverty, often born out of wedlock, and many are neglected, unwashed, unwanted, and unloved.
     “Public school teachers are scorned on editorial pages and maligned from ignorant pulpits, but they keep on keeping on- and only God knows why.  They earn the poorest salaries among all the industrial nations, yet a new study shows they are among the brightest college students, and nearly half hold master’s degrees.”
     Were the “these people” you were talking about teachers, Phil?
     Or were “these people” union members?
     It is far, far too easy to forget that before unions, there was no middle class in this country.  There was the upper class, and there was a largely impoverished working class.
     Unions gave tens of millions of people and millions of families the opportunity to get fair wages for a day’s work, and have a decent life in the offing.
    The bosses didn’t like it.  Unions cut into their profit.
     Henry Ford’s goons shot at workers in efforts to bust the unions.
    There was no place for collective bargaining then, and there very apparently is no place for collective bargaining in the world of Phil Potvin.
    “Those people?”
    Yelling?  Screaming?
    About what, Phil?
    About decent, workable funding for pubic education?
    That’s a bad thing?
    What haven’t “they” done to deserve wages that are generally less than what a legislator – what Phil Potvin – makes in Lansing?
   What basket haven’t they emptied?  What lawn haven’t they mowed?
   What child haven’t they tried to educate as the public system is crumbling around them – because you think your business buddies will create new jobs if only the get a tax break.
    C’mon Phil.  You tell local educators and students you’re always ready to listen, then you turn around and call them a bunch of whiners.
     Gimme a break.

Posted in Phil Potvin, Schools | 1 Comment

Burning on Biggby Coffee & Snyder’s Tax Giveaways

I was driving through Grand Rapids and noticed a new Biggby Coffee billboard.  The billboard says something like “maybe you’ve heard, Biggby Coffe is accepting new franchise locations.”  While I’m a big fan of Michigan businesses, I am not a fan of Biggby Coffee.  Here is why.

You may remember that I ripped Biggby Coffee co-owner Mary Roszel for being a cheerleader at the signing of Governor Snyder’s business tax cut legislation.  The Bloomberg Businessweek article that covered the signing noted that each new franchise would employ 15 to 20 people.  Because of the business tax cut, Roszel suggests more people will buy franchise locations from Biggby for the low fee of $30,000, plus a yearly cut of their profits.  Not only will Biggby make a killing on franchise fees, Biggby’s profits are also tax free!  This is because Biggby Coffee operates as a limited liability company under the name Global Orange Development, LLC.  Sure, rich owners Bob Fish, Mary Roszel, Michael McFall and Sandy Green will have to pay the standard 4.25% income tax on whatever they take home like you and I do.  If they take in an additional million dollars between them this year because they don’t have to pay taxes, that will amount to $42,500 dollars in additional personal income tax.  So they pay $42,500 in taxes in order to take in an additional $957,500!  That is some sacrifice!  Some say we have to give this ginormous tax cut to help private sector businessess because they have “taken it on the chin these past few years.”   According to Biggby’s website, their sales grew 65% ($23 million to $38 million) from 2006 to 2009.  The past year and a half must not have been too painful as they went from 109 stores to 130 stores.  I’ll take some of that chin music!

So Biggby Coffee is putting up billboards and handing out freebies on the street to get people to pay them $30,000 to open up a coffee shop.  Michigan taxpayers are subsidizing both the franchisee and the franchiser by giving them a tax break at the expense of public school kids, seniors, and the poor.  It seems to me that public school kids are getting left with the coffee grounds while big business is sipping latte and praising Rick Snyder’s “reinvention.”

Posted in Business, Taxes | 5 Comments

Kids are Collateral Damage in Mackinac Center’s War.

The Mackinac Center for Public Policy publishes “The Michigan Capitol Confidential” and has the nerve to call it “news.”  A recent edition praises the Snyder tax cut that eliminates the “horrible” Michigan Business Tax.  However, the Mackinac Center is now trying to convince the legislature that they haven’t done enough, despite voters telling them they have already done too much. 

The Mackinac Center’s mouthpiece Ken Braun criticizes the legislature who passed the business tax cut because, get this, they didn’t take more money from public schools!  To justify greater cuts Brawn uses one of the the Mackinac Center’s tired lines noting that “the nation’s poorest taxpayers fork over some of the nation’s highest teacher salaries.”  This is typical misinformation from the so called conservative “think tank.”  Michigan teachers are the 12th highest paid in the nation (and falling).  Teachers make a whopping $46 a week above the national average.  Meanwhile, Michigan legislators are the 4th highest paid in the nation.  While Braun stretches the truth on teaching salaries, he may be right about our poor tax payers.  The Snyder plan shifts more of the tax burden onto individual tax payers including the poor.  Meanwhile, rich individuals like Biggby Coffee co-owner Mary Roszel are praising their new tax cut, or what the Snyder administration calls a “shared sacrifice.”   The Mackinac Center opinion piece also attacks teacher benefits by comparing them to the private industry.  However, they fail to mention that teacher pay is about even with private sector workers when you factor in level of education.

What is most disturbing about this particular Mackinac Center release is their solution to the tax problem (Note: taxes are at their lowest rate since 1950).  Their solution is for Tea Party groups to “finish the fight” by “providing their lawmakers . . . a map to the battlefield.”  Apparently the battlefield is our public schools and the Mackinac Center is fine with kids becoming collateral damage in their war on teachers.

Posted in Mackinac Center, Schools | 4 Comments