Thursday, May 23, 2019

TWU LOCAL 100 ELECTION OBJECTION NOTES HOW FEW WORKERS VOTED

Transport Workers Union Local 100 is the union for New York City bus and subway workers. They, just like the UFT, had a recent election for officers. Just as with the UFT, the voter turnout was abysmal. The challengers in the Local 100 are protesting the election with the US Department of Labor.

In the Chief Leader article covering the challenge, Joe Campbell one of the defeated candidates for President is cited. Tony Utano is the TWU President who won the election.

In the immediate aftermath of the election results, Mr. Campbell wrote in a social media post that Mr. Utano’s slate “was voted in by 18 percent of the eligible voting membership. That means 82% did not vote for them. Think about how dangerous that is going into contract talks. The fault of voter suppression, member disenfranchisement, and a purposefully horrible election process is the fault of the Union leadership and they wear that badge with dishonor throughout this upcoming term.”
I thought it might be interesting to compare what Michael Mulgrew's mandate is among working NYC teachers (no retirees or non teaching UFTers in this comparison. I want to talk teachers.

Fortunately, we have Jonathan Halabi from New Action's breakdown of the votes. While I disagree with Jonathan writing a wrong name for one of the caucuses as it is insulting to them and their voters, I still was pleased to have a place to look for election results.

There are around 70,000 UFT NYC teachers (that is probably a low number), Jonathan counts 11,909 voters. That translates into about a 17% turnout among teachers. We are approaching low turnout levels not seen since schoolboard elections. Michael Mulgrew's percentage of the votes may look huge at 78%, but it is only about 13% of the eligible teachers. Mulgrew's real strength is with retirees who don't vote in most unions for who represents active members.

Since Jonathan counts in a way that shows the number of voters lower, there probably were a few more voters but you get the idea.

A 13% mandate (let's make it 15% if we estimate higher) is no mandate and it explains why we can't do much as a union. On the other hand, to be fair let's give another view. Some might argue that the 86% teacher voting in favor of the recent contract shows teachers are content. That referendum had over 60,000 teachers cast ballots but voting was done in the schools where it is easier to get teachers to vote but there is very little security.

Do any readers want to chime in here? Are teachers content or have they given up on the UFT or is there something else going on?

4 comments:

  1. Unfortunately, it doesnt matter what I think.

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  2. I think most NYC teachers are fairly content due to the fact that there are so many new teachers working for the DOE and they don't know any better. Veteran teachers such as myself have every right to bitch about things like Danielson, no seniority based transfers, etc, because folks like me remember "the good old days". We do get paid very well and our health benefits are decent. I don't even care about the crazy kids that I work with as that is what I signed up for when I took this job in the 90's. What would I like to see? I would like to see reduced class sizes and a complete repeal of our NYS teacher evaluation law. (Return to S/U) Yes, I know that a change to our eval law is not something NYC can do alone as it takes the state legislature to change it, but the spineless UFT has not done squat in regards to a repeal. Oh yeah, I did sign the petition to gut the current eval law.

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  3. Great news, carranza is about to review the discipline code. I'm sure this is gonna be good...

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  4. This is a perfect place to get a read on how people really feel in the schools. Such sanity and judiciousness. And rationality.
    All 3 of them.

    ReplyDelete

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