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Title: Why I'm Fighting in Wisconsin
Source: Wall Street Journal
URL Source: http://online.wsj.com/article/SB100 ... 4132204576190260787805984.html
Published: Mar 10, 2011
Author: Scott Walker
Post Date: 2011-03-10 08:41:30 by A K A Stone
Keywords: None
Views: 11356
Comments: 20

In 2010, Megan Sampson was named an Outstanding First Year Teacher in Wisconsin. A week later, she got a layoff notice from the Milwaukee Public Schools. Why would one of the best new teachers in the state be one of the first let go? Because her collective-bargaining contract requires staffing decisions to be made based on seniority.

Ms. Sampson got a layoff notice because the union leadership would not accept reasonable changes to their contract. Instead, they hid behind a collective-bargaining agreement that costs the taxpayers $101,091 per year for each teacher, protects a 0% contribution for health-insurance premiums, and forces schools to hire and fire based on seniority and union rules.

My state's budget-repair bill, which passed the Assembly on Feb. 25 and awaits a vote in the Senate, reforms this union-controlled hiring and firing process by allowing school districts to assign staff based on merit and performance. That keeps great teachers like Ms. Sampson in the classroom.

Most states in the country are facing a major budget deficit. Many are cutting billions of dollars of aid to schools and local governments. These cuts lead to massive layoffs or increases in property taxes—or both.

In Wisconsin, we have a better approach to tackling our $3.6 billion deficit. We are reforming the way government works, as well as balancing our budget. Our reform plan gives state and local governments the tools to balance the budget through reasonable benefit contributions. In total, our budget-repair bill saves local governments almost $1.5 billion, outweighing the reductions in state aid in our budget.

While it might be a bold political move, the changes are modest. We ask government workers to make a 5.8% contribution to their pensions and a 12.6% contribution to their health-insurance premium, both of which are well below what other workers pay for benefits. Our plan calls for Wisconsin state workers to contribute half of what federal employees pay for their health-insurance premiums. (It's also worth noting that most federal workers don't have collective bargaining for wages and benefits.)

For example, my brother works as a banquet manager at a hotel and occasionally works as a bartender. My sister-in-law works at a department store. They have two beautiful kids. They are a typical middle-class Wisconsin family. At the start of this debate, David reminded me that he pays nearly $800 per month for his family's health-insurance premium and a modest 401(k) contribution. He said most workers in Wisconsin would love a deal like the one we are proposing.

The unions say they are ready to accept concessions, yet their actions speak louder than words. Over the past three weeks, local unions across the state have pursued contracts without new pension or health-insurance contributions. Their rhetoric does not match their record on this issue.

Local governments can't pass budgets on a hope and a prayer. Beyond balancing budgets, our reforms give schools—as well as state and local governments—the tools to reward productive workers and improve their operations. Most crucially, our reforms confront the barriers of collective bargaining that currently block innovation and reform.

When Gov. Mitch Daniels repealed collective bargaining in Indiana six years ago, it helped government become more efficient and responsive. The average pay for Indiana state employees has actually increased, and high-performing employees are rewarded with pay increases or bonuses when they do something exceptional.

Passing our budget-repair bill will help put similar reforms into place in Wisconsin. This will be good for the Badger State's hard-working taxpayers. It will also be good for state and local government employees who overwhelmingly want to do their jobs well.

In Wisconsin, we can avoid the massive teacher layoffs that schools are facing across America. Our budget-repair bill is a commitment to the future so our children won't face even more dire consequences than we face today, and teachers like Ms. Sampson are rewarded—not laid off.

Taking on the status quo is no easy task. Each day, there are protesters in and around our state Capitol. They have every right to be heard. But their voices cannot drown out the voices of the countless taxpayers who want us to balance our budgets and, more importantly, to make government work for each of them.

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#2. To: A K A Stone, jwpegler (#0)

Ms. Sampson got a layoff notice because the union leadership would not accept reasonable changes to their contract. Instead, they hid behind a collective-bargaining agreement that costs the taxpayers $101,091 per year for each teacher,

What a filthy lie.

http://teacherportal.com/salary/Wisconsin-teacher-salary

Average Teacher Salary Rank: 20th

Starting Teacher Salary Rank: 49th

Starting Salary: $25,222

Average Salary: $46,390

The WSJ did this sort of lie before when it would lie about how much union auto workers - converting their pension plans and health care costs into a figure to show them as overpaid. I am sure such fudging was used by the WSJ liar here.

Godwinson  posted on  2011-03-10   9:53:31 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#3. To: Godwinson (#2) (Edited)

You are the filthy liar because you only talk about salary instead of total compensation.

The fact is that unions have put more focus on benefits than salaries over the years. The average private sector employee gets about $9,000 in benefits a year. The average government bureaucrat gets about $41,000 in benefits.

Average total compensation for teachers in Milwaukee is $100,000 a year. There are suburban areas where it is substantially more. There are rural areas where it is less.

On top of this, teachers barely work 8 months a year. They get 10 weeks off in the summer, 1 week at Christmas break, 1 week at mid-winter break, 1 at spring break, plus 11 holidays. That's 15 weeks off.

On hourly basis, the average teacher in Milwaukee earns $68 an hour in total compensation. That's good money. They earn this in spite of their poor performance.

This all has to change to save the country.

jwpegler  posted on  2011-03-10   10:26:18 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#10. To: jwpegler (#3)

On hourly basis, the average teacher in Milwaukee earns $68 an hour in total compensation. That's good money. They earn this in spite of their poor performance.

That would make teacher's hourly pay in Wisconsin equal to legislator's pay.

As for poor performance:

Texas, which forbids teacher's unions ranks 45th (1462) to Wisconsin's 3rd (1778) in SAT scores. Using ACT scores as a measure, Texas ranks 35th (20.8), and Wisconsin 13th (22.3). 2010 data

Capitalist Texas forbids unions and still has under funded pensions and a budget deficit the size of socialist California.

Texans should take heart though. High oil prices made Texas late to the recession, and the return of high oil prices may save its behind.

lucysmom  posted on  2011-03-10   11:09:25 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


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