These workers have been without a contract since 2012.
From the Chief Leader (Most of the article is behind a pay wall.):
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Since our October 5 post came out on what it would take to fix the UFT internally or for the high school division to oust the UFT and start a new union, we have received some inquiries and several commitments to help with fragmenting the high schools into a separate bargaining unit but not enough to make anyone at the UFT sweat. |
Our main point in writing the October 5 post was to say that bolting from the UFT and starting over or fixing it from within would both require massive undertakings. If teachers in much larger numbers than are currently involved, are willing to become active, we can make a difference. If, however, folks have given up on the prospect of a real union, then conditions in the schools will continue to deteriorate. It's too late to just blame Michael Mulgrew for that.
Union power comes from a rank and file willing to do whatever it takes to improve working conditions, not from a leader. Leaders can only help move the center of gravity in the right direction. Our colleagues need to be persuaded that it is in their interest to become involved in a militant, activist union.
As my colleague now retired Chapter Leader from Bryant High School Sam Lazarus repeatedly says:
"The two problems with the UFT are the leadership and the membership."
We can't solve the leadership problem without first activating the membership. It is up to all of you and make no mistake about it, nothing will be easy.
13 comments:
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Bus drivers as a whole are much smarter than the average teacher.
How are on earth are UFT members supposed to give Unity/UFT the heave-ho when fewer than twenty-five percent can be bothered to vote for a contract or in union elections?
It's a sign of delusional/magical thinking for people to think that tens of thousands of teachers who don't even know exactly how and why they're being screwed over, will somehow educate, organize and mobilize themselves to replace Unity/UFT.
The example of the bus drivers may illustrate the process of dumping a union that members are dissatisfied with, but as James correctly points out, the UFT is a huge institution, and trying to replace it would be orders of magnitude more difficult than what these bus drivers are attempting, due to the far larger scale involved.
We could do it with high school teachers only.
Mod Def less emotional��
Anonymous 12:48,
With high school teachers as a separate bargaining unit of a different union, the odds shift from all-but-impossible to highly unlikely. At best.
I am in with 12:48
Me too.
It is totally possible for high school teachers to have their own union. NYPD has it's own patrol officers union, captain union, detective union, sergeant union.
Detectives are pretty much the same rank as patrol officers and they have their own union. There was a separate high school teachers union in the 1950s that successfully waged a strike. It is possible but not here on line. People would have to be willing to hit the schools and talk to the other teachers to get them to sign a petition. Organizing a union is very difficult work. It requires real committment from activists and new activists.
Unfortunately, membership lacks 2 very important criteria for ever challenging
the UFT leadership: BALLS
I'll get you 60 signatures James. Now we need 99 more to get 60.
Sadly, you have a point 8:11 but has membership ever been asked to step up in the last 25 years? You never know what might happen if membership was asked to do union battle.You might find they have the requisite stones.
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