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Tuesday, June 17, 2014

A labor embrace for Malloy, with a jab over education | The CT Mirror

A labor embrace for Malloy, with a jab over education | The CT Mirror:



A labor embrace for Malloy, with a jab over education

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Randi Weingarten, national AFT president, makes a plea for Malloy.
CT MIRROR
Randi Weingarten, national AFT president, makes a plea for Malloy.
New Haven – The Connecticut AFL-CIO’s biennial political convention was a two-day infomercial promoting the re-election of Gov. Dannel P. Malloy, with one carefully choreographed note of discord: A rebuke to the Democratic governor’s choice of Stefan Pryor as commissioner of education.
Before formally endorsing Malloy, the statewide labor federation adopted a resolution Tuesday calling for a requirement that an education commissioner hold the same credential as a school superintendent, a standard that Pryor does not meet.
“We’re hoping the governor’s listening,” said Melodie Peters, the president of AFT-Connecticut, one of the state’s two major teachers’ unions.
The resolution drawn up by the AFT, which separately endorsed Malloy ahead of the AFL-CIO convention, was a message to a Democratic governor and to labor’s rank-and-file. It was meant as a gentle rebuke to Malloy, not a rejection; a way to soothe educators, not provoke them.
Pryor never was mentioned by name, but he has become a pressure-relief valve for labor, which acknowledges a need to draw anger away from the governor. Peters agreed when asked if the resolution was a second-term message to Malloy about a need for a new commissioner.
“I would say so,” she said.
Teachers have been unhappy with the Malloy administration over its perceived friendliness to the charter-school movement, which Pryor symbolizes as a charter-school founder. More damaging were words uttered by the governor in a major address outlining education reform in 2012, when he suggested that tenure could be won just by showing up.
Teacher unrest has given Jonathan Pelto, an education blogger and former Democratic state legislator, an opening to try to organize a third-party run for governor.
Malloy told the delegates Monday in a well-received speech that he’s made mistakes, but he stopped far short of apologizing for what teachers still say was a gratuitous and deliberate insult.
The task for union leaders has been to manage the anger of the rank-and-file, sharply contrasting the overall labor record of Connecticut’s first Democratic governor in a generation with the hostility to labor and collective bargaining by GOP governors in once-union friendly states like Wisconsin and Michigan.
Another complication has been a local fight over control of the public schools in Bridgeport, an overwhelmingly Democratic city A labor embrace for Malloy, with a jab over education | The CT Mirror: