Thursday, March 31, 2022

CAMILLE-UFC IN THE CHIEF ASKS UFTERS IF THEY ARE BETTER OFF NOW THAN TWO OR THREE YEARS AGO

 A major story on the UFT election was in this week's Civil Service newspaper, The Chief. Lots of quotes from Camille leading the United for Change slate. Mulgrew couldn't be bothered with the Chief. 

Teacher hopeful of turning the tide at the UFT



Queens teacher Camille Eterno, far right, part of the United For Change slate, is challenging the longtime president of the United Federation of Teachers, Michael Mulgrew, in balloting that begins the second week of April.
Queens teacher Camille Eterno, far right, part of the United For Change slate, is challenging the longtime president of the United Federation of Teachers, Michael Mulgrew, in balloting that begins the second week of April.

By CRYSTAL LEWIS clewis@thechiefleader.com

For veteran teacher Camille Eterno, safety concerns for her fellow educators during the coronavirus pandemic were what prompted her to run to become the United Federation of Teachers’s next leader.

“We’ve lost over 100 UFT members to the Covid virus,” said Eterno, who is challenging the UFT’s longtime president, Michael Mulgrew, in balloting next month. 

A six-decade streak

Eterno is running as part of the United For Change slate, a coalition of six dissident caucuses that formed last fall to pose a greater challenge to the Unity caucus, which has led the UFT since the early 1960s. The upstart slate faces an uphill battle: Mulgrew has served as UFT president since 2009, and easily won re-election to a fourth term in 2019 with 86 percent of the vote.

But during a recent phone interview, Eterno argued that this was the perfect chance to transform the UFT, which she believes is a “top-down” organization, into a member-run union. United For Change aims to reduce class sizes, improve pay and empower rank-and-file members. 

“The feedback we’ve gotten has been very positive. People are hungry for a change,” said Eterno, who started teaching in city public schools in 1996 and has served as a chapter leader and delegate for 18 years.

Mulgrew was said to be unavailable for comment, but Karen Alford, who has served as the UFT’s vice president for elementary schools since 2008 and is also running for re-election, said the union’s goal is to “make sure that our folks are treated as a union of professionals—that there is a fair wage so that when we walk into the classroom we can do the best job possible.”

'We Do The Work'

Unity’s campaign slogan centered on “doing the work.” Alford pointed to a number of achievements by the UFT, including an arbitration ruling earlier this year that provided members who were forced to work during the canceled spring break in 2020 with vacation days as compensation. 

She also highlighted safety standards negotiated between the city and the union to protect students and staff from Covid, including testing, contact tracing and protective equipment in every school building.

“We are a model for this country for what health and safety looks like for educators. Schools that had broken ventilation for 20 years now have working ventilation,” Alford said.

But those achievements are not enough, Eterno argued.

“I don’t think Mulgrew fought hard enough for health care for retirees, for raises that keep up with inflation, or to reduce class sizes. He’s too busy making concessions,” she said.

Against retiree health-care changes

She believed the end of the seniority transfer list in the union’s 2005 contract was one such concession, which then led to the creation of the controversial Absent Teacher Reserve. United For Change also sought to reverse the city’s plan to move municipal retirees’ health coverage to a Medicare Advantage plan. 

In early March, a Manhattan Supreme Court judge ruled that the city must provide retirees with the option of keeping their current health insurance free of charge. Some retirees have expressed concerns that Medicare Advantage offered lesser benefits than traditional Medicare, or that it would be more costly.

UFT leadership supported the new program, but believed that it suffered from serious implementation problems. “We are still working to make sure that this is a plan that works for our members,” Alford said. “We want to make sure it is a plan that is cost-effective and takes care of their health needs. We don’t want a plan that feels like it’s being done to you.”

The slates also differ on the issue of mayoral control of schools. 

Eterno argued that mayoral control was responsible for many school closures, which then led to ballooning class sizes. Under former Mayor Michael Bloomberg, nearly 200 low-performing schools were closed between 2002 and 2013.

'Mayoral Control A Disservice'

“Mayoral control has done a disservice to public school children. I don’t think Mulgrew will fight hard enough against mayoral control, he wants tweaks,” she said.

But Alford argued that instead of reverting oversight of schools back to local school boards, there could be other ways to improve mayoral control, such as giving more power to parents through the Panel for Educational Policy.

“As opposed to throwing the baby out with the bathwater, is there a way to put in some checks and balances?” she asked.

One issue they agree on, though, was encouraging more members to participate in the election. 

“Only 23 percent responded to mail-in ballots in 2019—so the vast majority of the UFT members are not participating,” Eterno explained. Although the UFC candidate called for electronic ballots in order to encourage members to vote, Alford said “a multi-partisan election committee” decided to retain mail ballots.

“We want everyone to fill out their ballots so they can be counted,” she said. 

Ballots will be mailed April 8

Alford has been challenged by UFC’s Tameka Solomon, while Annie Tan is seeking to defeat incumbent LeRoy Barr for secretary. UFC's Luli Rodriguez and treasurer Debra Penny are among the other candidates facing off.

Ballots will be sent out April 8, and will be counted on May 10 by the American Arbitration Association.

Eterno said that if she wins, she wants to empower members so they know what their rights are, especially those facing harassment and retaliation. 

“To people who aren’t sure which way to vote, I would say, ‘Look around you,’” she said. “I would ask them ‘Are you better off now than you were two or three years ago?’”



13 comments:

  1. She really needs to make a video about this and post it all over social media. Election ballots come out next week. It is crucial that she floods social media with her image and words. Having meet the candidate invites is nice but 99% of teachers won't show or sign on for a Zoom meet. However, those same teachers browse social media multiple times a day.

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  2. “We’ve lost over 100 UFT members to the Covid virus,” said Eterno, who is challenging the UFT’s longtime president, Michael Mulgrew, in balloting next month.“

    And we lost hundreds more because of useless mandates that you promoted on tv! You still have the audacity to keep bringing up COVID to gain power. That might have worked for Biden, but not for you! Try another strategy instead of more fear porn.

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  3. Actually, the logically correct question is not are you better off. The real question is... are you better off now vs three years ago with Mulgrew as Prez than you would have been if Camille had been Prez? And the answer is yes. A terrible three years. We're lucky we had Mulgrew's steady hand on the tiller.

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  4. The schools closed too late in March 2020. It caused many infections when COVID was at its worst in NYC. Mulgrew dithering. Camille will not.

    The safety strike theat in August 2020 was a joke that nobody took seriously.

    Mulgrew agreed to the delayed final retro payment in October 2020. Then, he lied and said it was an arbitrator's decision. The arbitrator was just a scribe.

    Working conditions are not improving.

    In 2021, of course Mulgrew helped create in secret and then put the UFT's large weighted vote in the MLC to privatize retiree Medicare now known as Mulgrewcare. Until a judge stopped it, a retired couple would have had to pay almost $400 a month to keep their federal Medicare-Senior Care that is now premium free.

    I don't want that concessionary Mulgrew hand anywhere near us for a second longer.

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  5. In answer to James... I thought the schools closed very quickly in 2020. It was an unprecedented event and we closed much faster than any other district in the country. The retro delay is very small potatoes. Health care prices are skyrocketing. The Advantage program is actually excellent. Here's the big issue. After a worldwide calamity our union is still standing... strong and united. 4 years after JANUS less than 1% have opted out. Mulgrew is a great President. He has my vote.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. NYC was the epicenter of pandemic in March 2020. Mulgrew dithered and delayed as COVID spread. Unity told UFTers to sign a petition and not to call in sick. Members took action by signing petition and calling out sick en masse. Schools closed for kids. March 15.

      Mulgrew still agreed to 3 useless in-person PD days. This blog and MORE told people not to go in and advised how to take self help
      and stay out legally.

      Mulgrew even admitted it was logical to conclude people got sick because schools were open too long.

      If you are happy, by all means continue with this failed leadership but at least tell what really happened.

      Delete
  6. The sad part is you guys really think you're gonna win. You're deluded. The retirees are sticking with Unity. The elementary will go the same way. You'll win Hs, but nothing else. And this time, the disappointment is gonna hurt.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. It's called passion, fighting for a cause. Something Unity knows nothing about. They're the play dead and roll over caucus. Vote UFC. and smile while you do it (:

      Delete
    2. @11:11pm. If UFC loses it won't be because they didn't try. I think it's sad to just sit back and let someone give you what THEY think is good enough for you. Jim Jones would have loved someone like you.

      Delete
  7. There is no scientific polling. A Unity sweep means the entire UFT is okay with what was done. Unity will become worse.

    A win in the high schools for UfC would mean opposition voices at Exec Bd where the Board is small enough so our voices can't be stifled. If we take high schools, that would be cool to have people like Lydia Howrilka, Ibeth Mejia and others on Executive Board. MORE UFC votes equals more change. You never know.

    ReplyDelete
  8. UFC is no different. They serve kool aid too. They’re just serving up Marxist kool aid. And that’s why they won’t make a dent.

    ReplyDelete

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