• Dedicated to fact-based journalism and commentary on the state of education in New Jersey
New York State Teachers Union Goes WildNew York State Teachers Union Goes WildNew York State Teachers Union Goes WildNew York State Teachers Union Goes Wild
  • Latest News
  • NJER-TV
  • Communities
      • Asbury Park
      • Camden
      • Jersey City
      • Lakewood
      • Montclair
      • Newark
      • Paterson
      • Trenton
  • Policy
    • By The Numbers
    • COVID-19
    • DOE
    • Education on the Ballot
    • Educational Equity
    • Press Release
    • State
  • Voices
    • Parent Voices
    • Teacher Voices
  • Opinion
    • NJER Commentary
  • About
    • Laura Waters
  • Subscribe
✕
UFT Attacks NYC Charters for Discriminating Against Kids with Disabilities, But He Misses the Real Story
January 27, 2016
Sunday Leftovers
January 31, 2016
Show all

New York State Teachers Union Goes Wild

By Laura Waters at January 28, 2016
Topic
  • General
Tags
  • NYSUT

From the Albany Times-Union:

New York teachers are suing the state over new regulations that allow superintendents to impose improvement plans on underperforming teachers without first negotiating with their union. 

New York State United Teachers and six local unions, including Troy and Schenectady teachers’ groups, are plaintiffs in the suit. The Board of Regents, which sets education policy for the state, and the state Education Department, which writes the rules and regulations pertaining to education, are listed as defendants, along with their respective leaders, Chancellor Merryl Tisch and Commissioner MaryEllen Elia. 

Unions say the new regulations violate their collective bargaining rights under the state’s Taylor Law, which governs public employee contracts and negotiations. Over the years, changes in teacher evaluation and disciplinary procedures required negotiation.

Labor unions serve important purposes. But what profession requires supervisors to negotiate with a union representative before implementing improvement plans for under-performing employees?

In this case, filed Tuesday in State Supreme Court, New York State United Teachers claims that new regulations allowing superintendents to create improvement plans for teachers rated “ineffective” violates the Taylor Law. Here’s a summary of the law from an abstract of a paper written Albany Law School Professor Vincent Martin Bonventre:

The duty of fair representation in labor negotiations was born in Supreme Court case law
to protect against racial discrimination and as a bastion of individuals’ interests during exclusive union representation in the collective bargaining process. The law later became as much a prescription for deference to unions as a protector from arbitrary union rule. As it currently stands, the law has become a minimal safeguard against wholly irrational and invidious union conduct far from the original guarantee of competent and committed union representation. Almost 25 years after the Supreme Court recognized a duty of fair representation in federal labor law, the New York legislature enacted the Taylor Law – officially the Public Employees’ Fair Employment Act. Since the adoption of the Taylor Act, the New York legislature and courts have incorporated the federal doctrine into the statute for use by New York’s public sector employees.

Of course, this suit has nothing to do with racial discrimination and represents the Taylor Law’s devolution into “deference for unions” at all costs.  Imagine the scenario if the plaintiffs prevail: every time a superintendent deems that a teacher or principal is ineffective and in need of professional development, he or she would be required to convene time-sucking and expensive negotiations with union representatives. Talk about a disincentive.

My parents were both proud UFT members and I know they’d look askance at efforts to derail professional improvement. This is the sort of embarrassing case that undermines union leaders and the shared cause of placing effective teachers in front of every classroom.

Share
Laura Waters
Laura Waters

Related posts

August 27, 2021

Newark Union President Says Newark Parents Are Too Ignorant to Know if They Support Charter Schools


Read more
August 26, 2021

Over Last Two Years Lakewood Lawyer Took Home $2.1 Million of Your Tax Money


Read more
August 25, 2021

Top Ten Highest Paid Superintendents in New Jersey, One Per County


Read more

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Subscribe to the
NJER Morning Report

The NJ Education Report is your trusted source for news and commentary about schools across our state. Get the latest in your inbox.

Subscribe

Camden Second Annual College Signing Day

https://youtu.be/7kOP2CnZ7PU

Teachers and Parents Join Together To Advocate for Educational Change

https://youtu.be/LUA0yjPXzII

LANGUAGE

POPULAR TOPICS

Opinion State NJER-TV Newark

MORE TOPICS

CONNECT WITH NJER

SUGGEST AN ARTICLE IDEA, SEND A NEWS TIP OR SUBMIT A PRESS RELEASE

Submit details

NJ Education Report

NJER is dedicated to fact-based journalism and commentary on the state of education in New Jersey, with a commitment to voicing the concerns of parents, students, teachers and school leaders.

Subscribe

About

Laura Waters

Standards & Ethics

Privacy Policy

Advertising Opportunities

NJ Education Report
© 2023 NJ Education Report. All Rights Reserved.