Friday, July 11, 2014

Teachers union to rally in L.A. against loss of job protections - Los Angeles Times

Teachers union to rally in L.A. against loss of job protections - Los Angeles Times:



Teachers union to rally in L.A. against loss of job protections


Randi Weingarten at a Kansas rally






 National union leaders will rally members in Los Angeles this weekend to oppose a recent court ruling that struck down key teacher job protections in the state.



The American Federation of Teachers, at its national convention, will vote on a resolution that condemns the motivation behind Vergara v. California as well as Harris v. Quinn, in which the U.S. Supreme Court limited the right of unions to collect dues from non-members who are represented by unions in contract negotiations.



Related story: Bill to speed firing of some public school teachers advances

Related story: Bill to speed firing of some public school teachers advances

Howard Blume

“Anti-union, anti-worker groups are challenging our voting, political and collective bargaining rights while anti-public education forces have made a concerted effort to undercut fairness for our students, families and communities, capitalizing on the shared frustration with the inequities in our economy and our schools to divide our communities,” the resolution said in part.



The court decisions “are contributing to an escalating and engineered imbalance in our democracy, one where corporations and the wealthy have a dominant voice,” it said.



The union vows a concerted counter-effort “at the ballot box and the bargaining table, in the streets, Washington, D.C., and state capitals, in the courthouse and the court of public opinion.”



Teachers unions have said they will appeal the Vergara ruling.



The prevailing side in Vergara was funded by Students Matter, a Silicon Valley-based group focused on litigation that advances its vision of education reform.



L.A. Superior Court Judge Rolf Treu ruled last month that several job protections for teachers violated the state constitution. He threw out the state's tenure process, stripped teachers of rules that made dismissing them more difficult and expensive, and he eliminated using seniority as the primary factor in deciding which teachers to lay off.



He said these practices resulted in greater numbers of ineffective teachers, disproportionately harming poor and minority students.



“This court decision has to be fought because it invalidates protections that are very important for people as opposed to addressing what will help students get the teachers they deserve,” said AFT President Randi Weingarten in an interview Thursday. The ruling “created such fear in Teachers union to rally in L.A. against loss of job protections - Los Angeles Times: