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#211910 - 09/20/03 02:24 PM Re: NFR Why are they striking?
Born to fish Offline
Parr

Registered: 02/18/03
Posts: 48
Loc: Elma, Washington
Maybe it's my cranky mood, but this thread is really irritating to me today. Obviously there's a lot of folks on this board that feel school teachers and government employees are a bunch of overpaid whinners. I'll even go so far to agree that sometimes that's the case, but you'd think by this board it's the norm.

Now I have a question for those that are whinning about overpaid teachers and government workers. If they have it so easy, why don't you apply for these positions you're complaining about? What better place to make change than from the inside. All we've heard about is how bad private sector is and employees don't make squat. It never ceases to amaze me how unemployed friends complain how great I have it, yet won't drag their lazy butttts down to apply for one of these "perfect jobs".

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#211911 - 09/20/03 03:07 PM Re: NFR Why are they striking?
cowlitzfisherman Offline
Three Time Spawner

Registered: 06/14/00
Posts: 1828
Loc: Toledo, Washington
Dan
Your questions are a little confusing, so I will answer them as best as I can.

For one thing, colleges and universities do not impose "special levy taxes" upon us. Even though some are state funded, they get to charge tuition fees (user fees) and that makes all the difference. The party that is seeking the benefits is paying for those benefits! When professors are funded privately, I really don't care how much they are being paid because it's not our money.

If people want to pay those huge fees for those kind of schools, I say let them pay it because it’s a "free enterprise". But when they go to colleges that are paid for with public monies, the free enterprise system should not be used in my opinion.

If you talking a bout "private institutions", I would agree that they would have a much better knowledge on what they should or should not be paying their professors. But if they are using public funds, then they must abide by what the public thinks the wages should be. Professors have more training then teachers do, so they should be entitled to higher salaries.

It's really no different then any other profession. You will always make more in a private sector then in a like profession in a public position. The big difference there is usually in "rules", and "benefits" that separate the two positions.

Cowlitzfisherman
_________________________
Cowlitzfisherman

Is the taste of the bait worth the sting of the hook????

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#211912 - 09/20/03 03:21 PM Re: NFR Why are they striking?
bodysurf Offline
Returning Adult

Registered: 11/28/01
Posts: 324
Loc: olympia
i don't know any teachers that only work 8hours a day...most have to grade papers,tests,write lesson plans etc every night for several hours...seems they work more hours in 8 months than most people do in 12....

kind of a circular argument....people complain about bad teachers or unqualified teachers but won't pay enough to encourage more people to
to become teachers...why teach chemistry when you can make more $ working for merck? and you don't have to baby sit a bunch of ill-behaved brats?
no wonder there's such nationwide shortage of teachers....

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#211913 - 09/20/03 04:02 PM Re: NFR Why are they striking?
cowlitzfisherman Offline
Three Time Spawner

Registered: 06/14/00
Posts: 1828
Loc: Toledo, Washington
Born to fish, you said;

Quote:
"Obviously there are a lot of folks on this board that feel school teachers and government employees are a bunch of overpaid whinners."
That's kind of funny because now, a lot of us "know" who some of those overpaid whinners are! laugh (Find out what state employees make-WDFW Pages: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8)

But getting back to your question;

Quote:
"If they have it so easy, why don't you apply for these positions you're complaining about?"
Here's just a few of the reasons for starters why many people do not want to work in those public positions.

Cronyism and nepotism, it runs ramped in many state jobs! You know it, so I will not go any further on those two. Next, people know that they will never be promoted on their abilities of there skills, or how well they do their job. When you work as a public savant, promotion comes with time and not with how successful you have perform your job. In free enterprise, you get paid for what you are worth and not for how long you have been there!

In yes, some people actually do enjoy doing physical work and don't feel dirty about doing it. That is sometimes hard to find in a lot of "public jobs" People dream about owning and running their own companies and business in private enterprise, while people in public services often have nightmares about being number one!

Well take no personal offence BTF, because we already know that you are not one of those "many"! We know that you have a small business on the side, so that tells us that you have ambition. But I am sure that there are lots of "other reasons" why people choose not to work in public positions. These are just a few quick ones that have come to mind to answer your question. laugh


Cowlitzfisherman
_________________________
Cowlitzfisherman

Is the taste of the bait worth the sting of the hook????

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#211914 - 09/20/03 04:57 PM Re: NFR Why are they striking?
Dan S. Offline
It all boils down to this - I'm right, everyone else is wrong, and anyone who disputes this is clearly a dumbfuck.

Registered: 03/07/99
Posts: 16958
Loc: SE Olympia, WA
I see your point Bob, but you have to remember that our public institutions compete directly with private institutions to draw talent and skill for their teaching positions. If public schools' wages aren't competitive then the result is a bunch of hacks teaching at our public universities.

If you ask me, allowing that to happen is being penny-wise and pound-foolish.
Of course, this is just my opinion........others' opinions may vary. wink
_________________________
She was standin' alone over by the juke box, like she'd something to sell.
I said "baby, what's the goin' price?" She told me to go to hell.

Bon Scott - Shot Down in Flames

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#211915 - 09/20/03 05:50 PM Re: NFR Why are they striking?
Skywalker Offline
Spawner

Registered: 03/10/01
Posts: 570
Loc: Snohomish, WA, USA
cfm, as long as you don't make irrelevant comparisons (particularly when it's solely for the purpose of making some smart-@ss remark to insult someone) and you back up your claims with some sort of substantiation, I won't be commenting on your credibility. Deal?

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#211916 - 09/20/03 06:31 PM Re: NFR Why are they striking?
cowlitzfisherman Offline
Three Time Spawner

Registered: 06/14/00
Posts: 1828
Loc: Toledo, Washington
Skywalker

That's sounds reasonable if it goes both ways!

If you people are that brain dead to continue to believe the BS that these teachers continue to spill out, do yourselves the biggest favor in you lives and read the following "perks" and "benefits" that this elite group of workers get! And guess who put all these rules into effect? laugh If you don't work as a teacher or other state employee….you got to ask yourselves…what the hell is going on here!

Read them… and then come back with those bleeding heart statements! What other group of lobbyist have made so many laws that guarantees their own retirement? This only the tip of a huge iceberg! Like your teacher says… do your homework kids! laugh

SECTIONS
"PROVISIONS APPLICABLE TO PLAN 1, PLAN 2, AND PLAN 3"

41.32.005
Provisions applicable to "plan 1," "plan 2," and "plan 3."
41.32.010
Definitions.

41.32.013
Substitute teachers -- Application for service credit -- Procedures.

41.32.020
Name of system.
41.32.025
Department's power to determine eligibility.

41.32.032
Membership in system -- Service credit of educational staff associates.

41.32.035
Employer contribution rates -- Computation and payment.

41.32.042
Validity of deductions -- Interest.

41.32.044
Retired teacher may reenter system -- Benefit limitations.

41.32.052
Exemption from taxation and judicial process -- Exceptions -- Nonassignability -- Deductions authorized.

41.32.054
Disability retirement -- Criminal conduct.

41.32.055
Falsification -- Penalty.

41.32.062
Effect of certain accumulated vacation leave on retirement benefits.

41.32.063
Benefit calculation -- Limitation.

41.32.064
Establishing, restoring service credit.

41.32.065
Election to use out-of-state service credit to calculate time at which the member may retire.

41.32.067
Purchase of additional benefits -- Conditions.

"PLAN 1"

41.32.215
Provisions applicable to plan 1.

41.32.240
Membership in system.

41.32.260
Credit for military service or as state legislator.

41.32.263
State legislators and state officials eligible for retirement benefits.

41.32.267
Service credit for paid leave of absence -- Application to elected officials of labor organizations.

41.32.270
Teaching service, how credited.

41.32.300
Limitation on credit for out-of-state service.

41.32.310
Time limit for claiming service credit -- Payments.

41.32.330
Credit for professional preparation subsequent to becoming teacher.

41.32.340
Creditable service, what to consist of.

41.32.345
"Earnable compensation" defined for certain part-time employees -- Adoption of rules.

41.32.350
Purchase of additional annuity.

41.32.360
Basis of contributions to disability reserve fund.

41.32.366
Basis of contributions to death benefit fund.

41.32.380
Source of pension reserve -- Contributions.

41.32.390
Contributions for prior service credits.

41.32.470
Eligibility for retirement allowance.

41.32.480
Qualifications for retirement.

41.32.485
Minimum retirement allowance -- Cost-of-living adjustment -- Post-retirement adjustment -- Computation.

41.32.4851
Minimum retirement allowance -- Annual adjustment -- Persons who become beneficiaries after June 30, 1995.

41.32.4872
Permanent increase for specified beneficiaries age seventy or over.

41.32.489
Retirement allowance -- Annual increases -- Eligibility.

41.32.4931
Additional special pension for former members not receiving social security.

41.32.4945
Limitation as to earnable compensation of member as member of the legislature.

41.32.497
Retirement allowance for members entering system before April 25, 1973 -- Election.

41.32.498
Retirement allowance for members entering system after April 25, 1973, or in lieu of allowance under RCW 41.32.497.

41.32.4986
Members with thirty years of service -- Irrevocable election.

41.32.4991
Permanent retirement allowance adjustment.

41.32.500
Termination of membership.

41.32.510
Payment on withdrawal -- Reentry.

41.32.520
Payment on death before retirement or within sixty days following application for disability retirement.

41.32.522
Death benefits.

41.32.523
Death benefits -- Members not qualified for benefits under RCW 41.32.522 and retired former members.

41.32.530
Options available -- Retirement allowance adjustment -- Court-approved property settlement.

41.32.540
Disability allowance -- Temporary.

41.32.550
Options and allowances on report that disability will be permanent -- Reexamination.

41.32.555
Persons with annual half-time contracts -- Eligibility for benefits under RCW 41.32.550.

41.32.570
Postretirement employment--Reduction or suspension of pension payments (as amended by 2001 c 317).

41.32.570
Postretirement employment--Reduction or suspension of pension payments (as amended by 2001 2nd sp.s. c 10).

"PLAN 2"

41.32.755
Provisions applicable to plan 2.

41.32.760
Computation of the retirement allowance.

41.32.762
Lump sum retirement allowance -- Reentry -- Conditions for reinstatement of service.

41.32.765
Retirement for service.

41.32.770
Post-retirement cost-of-living.

41.32.780
Teachers required to be members.

41.32.785
Options for payment of retirement allowances -- Retirement allowance adjustment -- Court-approved property settlement.

41.32.790
Earned disability allowance -- Eligibility -- Disposition upon death of recipient.

41.32.795
Application for and effective date of retirement allowances.

41.32.800
Suspension of retirement allowance upon reemployment -- Reinstatement.

41.32.802
Reduction of retirement allowance upon reemployment -- Reestablishment of membership.

41.32.805
Death benefits.
41.32.810
Service credit for paid leave of absence, officers of labor organizations, unpaid leave of absence, military service.

41.32.812
Service credit for half-time employment from October 1, 1977, through December 31, 1986.

41.32.815
Vested membership.


41.32.817
Transfer to plan 3 -- Irrevocable option.
41.32.818
Public employees' retirement system members who previously declined membership in the teachers' retirement system -- Transfer to plan 3 -- Irrevocable option.

41.32.820
Refund of contributions on termination.

41.32.825
Reentry.

"PLAN 3"

41.32.831
Provisions applicable to plan 3 -- Plan 3 elements.

41.32.835
Membership in plan 3.

41.32.840
Computation of the retirement allowance.

41.32.8401
Additional payment.

41.32.845
Postretirement cost-of-living allowance.

41.32.851
Options for payment of retirement allowances -- Court-approved property settlement.

41.32.855
Application for and effective date of retirement allowances.

41.32.860
Suspension of retirement allowance upon reemployment -- Reinstatement.

41.32.862
Reduction of retirement allowance upon reemployment -- Reestablishment of membership.

41.32.865
Service credit for paid leave of absence, officers of labor organizations, unpaid leave of absence, military service.

41.32.867
Purchased service credit -- Allocation.

41.32.870
Lump sum payments -- Reentry.

41.32.875
Retirement eligibility.

41.32.880
Earned disability allowance -- Eligibility -- Disposition upon death of recipient.

41.32.892
Restored, purchased service credit under plan 2 -- Transfer to plan 3.

41.32.895
Death benefits.
NOTES:
Numerical designations -- 1998 c 341: See note following chapter 41.26 RCW digest.
Prior acts relating to teachers' retirement: (1) 1943 c 116; 1941 c 97; 1939 c 86, 40; 1937 c 221 (repealed by 1947 c 80 § 70).
(2) 1931 c 115; 1923 c 187; 1919 c 150; 1917 c 163 (repealed by 1937 c 221 § 14).
Employee salary or compensation -- Limitations respecting: RCW 28A.400.220.
Portability of public retirement benefits: Chapter 41.54 RCW.
Teachers in state correctional facilities as members of teachers' retirement fund: RCW 72.01.200.

-----------------------------------------------------

And yes, you can bet your very last dollars that this was all done for the sake of the kids!


beathead mad

Wake up people....it's all about money and you have been sold bunch of BS!

Read them and educate yourselves!

Now you guys should know what "sucker punch" really is!

Cowlitzfisherman
_________________________
Cowlitzfisherman

Is the taste of the bait worth the sting of the hook????

Top
#211917 - 09/20/03 08:20 PM Re: NFR Why are they striking?
bodysurf Offline
Returning Adult

Registered: 11/28/01
Posts: 324
Loc: olympia
motto ....have union usually better than no have union....

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#211918 - 09/20/03 08:44 PM Re: NFR Why are they striking?
cowlitzfisherman Offline
Three Time Spawner

Registered: 06/14/00
Posts: 1828
Loc: Toledo, Washington
Bodysurf

Yep! Them there teacher unions sure do help them poor dumb kids! When, and if you read these RCW's, you almost want to puke in their faces! But first and foremost, a person needs to read them.....and then they can puke away! laugh

Cowlitzfisherman
_________________________
Cowlitzfisherman

Is the taste of the bait worth the sting of the hook????

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#211919 - 09/20/03 08:56 PM Re: NFR Why are they striking?
bodysurf Offline
Returning Adult

Registered: 11/28/01
Posts: 324
Loc: olympia
no pukin' here.....like i said....union usually better than no union....

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#211920 - 09/20/03 09:05 PM Re: NFR Why are they striking?
cowlitzfisherman Offline
Three Time Spawner

Registered: 06/14/00
Posts: 1828
Loc: Toledo, Washington
well you should be a puken!

For those of you that just are to tired to look up all the perks that teachers get, here are just a couple of them to read! Please do not puke until you are done reading! laugh


RCW 41.32.005
Provisions applicable to "plan 1," "plan 2," and "plan 3."
RCW 41.32.010 through 41.32.067 shall apply to members of plan 1, plan 2, and plan 3.
[1995 c 239 § 101; 1992 c 72 § 4; 1991 c 35 § 30; 1990 c 274 § 16. Prior: 1989 c 273 § 15; 1989 c 272 § 4; 1977 ex.s. c 293 § 19.]
NOTES:
Effective date -- 1995 c 239: "This act shall take effect July 1, 1996, except that sections 301 and 302 of this act shall take effect immediately [March 13, 1996]." [1996 c 39 § 23; 1995 c 239 § 327.]
Part and subchapter headings not law -- 1995 c 239: "Part headings and subchapter headings as used in this act constitute no part of the law." [1995 c 239 § 328.]
Intent -- Purpose -- 1995 c 239: See note following RCW 41.32.831.
Intent -- 1991 c 35: See note following RCW

41.26.005.
Findings -- Construction -- 1990 c 274: See notes following RCW 41.32.010.
Severability -- 1989 c 273: See RCW

41.45.900.
Purpose -- 1989 c 272: "The legislature recognizes that inflation erodes the purchasing power of retirement benefits. Although the benefit provided to state retirees from social security is fully protected, the benefits provided by the public employees' retirement system, plan 1, and the teachers' retirement system, plan 1 provide an automatic cost-of-living adjustment only for persons who receive the minimum benefit.

The purpose of this act is to add provisions to the teachers' retirement system and the public employees' retirement system which will help mitigate the impact of inflation on retirees of those systems. These additional provisions are intended to reflect and implement the following policies:
(1) The minimum benefit is increased in order to provide a more adequate basic standard of living to persons who retired long ago under lower salaries and less generous retirement benefit formulas; and
(2) Retirees whose benefits have lost forty percent of their purchasing power are made eligible for automatic adjustments which are provided in a manner that is consistent with the retirement age and benefit provisions of plan 2 of the teachers' retirement system and the public employees' retirement system."

RCW 41.32.025
Department's power to determine eligibility.
The department is empowered within the limits of this chapter and, with regard to restoration of service credit under RCW 41.50.165(2), to decide on all questions of eligibility covering membership, service credit, and benefits

RCW 41.32.032
Membership in system -- Service credit of educational staff associates.
(1) Any teacher, as defined under RCW 41.32.010, who is first employed by a public school on or after June 7, 1984, shall become a member of the retirement system if otherwise eligible.
(2) Any person who before June 7, 1984, has established service credit under chapter 41.40 RCW while employed in an educational staff associate position and who is employed in such a position on or after June 7, 1984, has the following options:
(a) To remain a member of the public employees' retirement system notwithstanding the provisions of RCW 41.32.240 or 41.32.780; or
(b) To irrevocably elect to join the retirement system under this chapter and to receive service credit for previous periods of employment in any position included under RCW 41.32.010. This service credit and corresponding employee contribution shall be computed as though the person had then been a member of the retirement system under this chapter. All employee contributions credited to a member under chapter 41.40 RCW for service now to be credited to the retirement system under this chapter shall be transferred to the system and the member shall not receive any credit nor enjoy any rights under chapter 41.40 RCW for those periods of service. The member shall pay any difference between the employee contributions made under chapter 41.40 RCW and transferred under this subsection and what would have been required under this chapter, including interest as set by the director. The member shall be given until July 1, 1989, to make the irrevocable election permitted under this section. The election shall be made by submitting written notification as required by the department requesting credit under this section and by remitting any necessary proof of service or payments within the time set by the department.
Any person, not employed as an educational staff associate on June 7, 1984, may, before June 30 of the fifth school year after that person's return to employment as a teacher, request and establish membership and credit under this subsection.

RCW 41.32.035
Employer contribution rates -- Computation and payment.
The amount paid by each employer shall be computed by applying the rates established under chapter 41.45 RCW to the total earnable compensation of the employer's members as shown on the current payrolls of the employer. The employer's contribution shall be paid at the end of each month in the amount due for that month, except as provided in RCW 41.32.013.

RCW 41.32.042
Validity of deductions -- Interest.
The deductions from salaries of members of the retirement system for their contributions to the system are not considered diminution of pay and every member is conclusively presumed to consent thereto as a condition of employment. All contributions to the member reserve shall be credited to the individual for whose account the deductions from salary were made. Regular interest shall be credited to each member's account at least annually.

RCW 41.32.044
Retired teacher may reenter system -- Benefit limitations.
A retired teacher upon returning to service in the public schools of Washington may elect to again become a member of the retirement system: PROVIDED, That if such a retired teacher elects to be restored to membership he must establish two full years of service credit before he will be eligible to retire under the provision of a formula other than the one in effect at the time of his previous retirement: PROVIDED FURTHER, That where any such right to again retire is exercised to become effective before a member has established two full years of service credit he may elect to retire only under the provisions of the formula in effect at the time of his previous retirement: AND PROVIDED FURTHER, That this section shall not apply to any individual who has returned to service and is presently in service on *the effective date of this 1973 amendatory act

RCW 41.32.052
Exemption from taxation and judicial process -- Exceptions -- Nonassignability -- Deductions authorized.
(1) Subject to subsections (2) and (3) of this section, the right of a person to a pension, an annuity, a retirement allowance, or disability allowance, to the return of contributions, any optional benefit or death benefit, any other right accrued or accruing to any person under the provisions of this chapter and the moneys in the various funds created by this chapter shall be unassignable, and are hereby exempt from any state, county, municipal or other local tax, and shall not be subject to execution, garnishment, attachment, the operation of bankruptcy or insolvency laws, or other process of law whatsoever.
(2) This section shall not be deemed to prohibit a beneficiary of a retirement allowance who is eligible:
(a) Under RCW 41.05.080 from authorizing monthly deductions therefrom for payment of premiums due on any group insurance policy or plan issued for the benefit of a group comprised of public employees of the state of Washington or its political subdivisions;
(b) Under a group health care benefit plan approved pursuant to RCW 28A.400.350 or 41.05.065 from authorizing monthly deductions therefrom, of the amount or amounts of subscription payments, premiums, or contributions to any person, firm, or corporation furnishing or providing medical, surgical, and hospital care or other health care insurance; or
(c) Under this system from authorizing monthly deductions therefrom for payment of dues and other membership fees to any retirement association composed of retired teachers and/or public employees pursuant to a written agreement between the director and the retirement association.
Deductions under (a) and (b) of this subsection shall be made in accordance with rules that may be adopted by the director.
(3) Subsection (1) of this section shall not prohibit the department from complying with (a) a wage assignment order for child support issued pursuant to chapter 26.18 RCW, (b) an order to withhold and deliver issued pursuant to chapter 74.20A RCW, (c) a notice of payroll deduction issued pursuant to RCW 26.23.060, (d) a mandatory benefits assignment order issued by the department, (e) a court order directing the department of retirement systems to pay benefits directly to an obligee under a dissolution order as defined in RCW 41.50.500(3) which fully complies with RCW 41.50.670 and 41.50.700, or (f) any administrative or court order expressly authorized by federal law.
_________________________
Cowlitzfisherman

Is the taste of the bait worth the sting of the hook????

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#211921 - 09/20/03 10:08 PM Re: NFR Why are they striking?
golfer Offline
Juvenille at Sea

Registered: 07/12/02
Posts: 150
Loc: Issaquah
CFW. You certainly have your cut and paste skills down. Reading between the lines, I think your biggest issue is the taxes you pay for the school system. What other motivation would you have to be so passionate about this topic? If you pull out the same language from teamster, longshoreman, and other unions, you would see much the same verbage. I don't se the point.

My kids go to a private school, and I harbor no ill will towards paying taxes to improve the quality of teaching and resources for the puplic schools. What better investment in this countries future than teachers, and the supporting resources. Don't under estimate thier challenges or responsibility. I'd like to see them paid more, with higher standards to attract better quality people. This type of argument is better spent on why Bush wants to pour $80 Billion into Iraq.
_________________________
Pass Me a Beer

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#211922 - 09/21/03 07:59 PM Re: NFR Why are they striking?
bodysurf Offline
Returning Adult

Registered: 11/28/01
Posts: 324
Loc: olympia
california will be recruiting more teachers here anyways....so the crunch will only get tighter...

what's the latest housing study say...for snohomish county you have to earn $19 hr minimun to afford to rent a 2 bedroom apt...if you got kids you better make a whole lot more than that and forget about buyin' a home...
in king county you need to earn $23 hr to afford to rent a 2 bedroom apt..homes around 300k there...
..silicon valley ran into the same problem a few years ago so they started to assist police,teachers,firefighters etc with buying homes and with big raises or there'd be no one willing to work there...
let's all race to the bottom......or how about import some teachers from india or china?
h1-b visas for all!!!

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#211924 - 09/22/03 12:01 AM Re: NFR Why are they striking?
Plunker Offline
Spawner

Registered: 04/01/00
Posts: 511
Loc: Skagit Valley
Now Aunty - Please be nice to dem teachers.

Dey's justa snaggin' some extra cash.

i suhports publik eh-d'u-cash-in!
_________________________
Why are "wild fish" made of meat?

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#211925 - 09/22/03 12:02 AM Re: NFR Why are they striking?
weedwacker Offline
Alevin

Registered: 01/09/02
Posts: 11
Loc: copalis
Better check again AuntyM. Police and fire have binding arbitration. Teachers don't, but I wish they did. They would make far more if they did. I'm married to a teacher. I wish she made 50 k a year. She doesn't even make 40 and she has her masters degree that she paid for not the state. Yeah she did it during those summer months when everbody thinks teachers are cruising the bahamas. I wonder if some of you know how much a masters in education costs? 20K is what we paid. Costs us 225 every month in college loans.

Do we live in mobile home? NO. We have a comfortable life. But she earns every penny and is worth a few more in my eye. Its too bad education has lost such respect in the publics eye. If I had it my way there would be a state wide strike so all you knuckle heads who think baby sitting, and wiping noses is a teachers job would take some responsiblity for your own childs eductation and well being.

Cowlits. Dont waste your time venting, it will fall on deaf ears.

Thanks for your support.
Husband of a teacher
_________________________
Sandshrimp

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#211926 - 09/22/03 01:22 AM Re: NFR Why are they striking?
David Offline
Juvenile at Sea

Registered: 02/19/00
Posts: 181
Loc: Homer, Alaska
Wow.

Unbelievable.


Questions like, "Why do teachers strike?" Why does anyone strike? Every employed or once employed person here knows that sometimes you have to draw the line. What happened when you were 8 years old and finally realized that the 50 cents your neighbor was giving you to mow the lawn was a bit under what it was worth? You stopped mowing their lawn. In effect, you went on strike. That's how employee / employer relationships function. That's how they've always functioned. That's how they'll always function.

Deal with it.

"Why do teachers ask for an outrageous raise?" Essentially the same deal. Just like buying a used car, you know the seller is going to ask more than what they expect to recieve for it, just like teachers ask for more than what they expect to recieve. Another classic American bargaining technique. Offers and counteroffers, that's the industry and economy of the United States.

Now personally, I don't think that levies have a damn thing to do with the subject of teachers wanting a raise. In fact, they don't have a damn thing to do with teachers wanting a raise, so I don't believe that they need to be mentioned in this post anymore.

How did any of us transition from being paid seven dollars an hour to a sufficient enough income to support our families? We needed a raise. In most cases, raises were given with experience or new job openings, sometimes you're just the best at what you do and you deserve more. Others had to go in and ask the boss for a raise or apply for a new position. Now this is one of the central differences between teaching and any other job. Good teachers don't get paid more than bad teachers. Teachers with 15 years experience don't get paid much more than teachers with 15 minutes experience, once you become a teacher, you can't be promoted up a floor and become an "executive teacher," or a CEO teacher, essentially you're always at the bottom. Because very few raises or opportunities to advance in the field are given, teachers must ask for a raise, whether it be to pay for housing, or greed, or because they think they're job's are becoming more difficult. I don't really care, it's just the way that the system works. You're either offered a raise, or you demand a raise, if you don't do that, you never get anywhere.

The 9 month vs. 12 month debate.

Very valid debate, kind of like whether it's better to work five eight hour shifts, or four tens. You could look at a person working tens and say, "Hey, that ******* only has to work 4 days a week and he still makes the same amount as I do when I work 5!!!" Do the math. Doesn't work that way, and neither does teaching. In my area, teachers are required to be at school from 8 AM to 4 PM. During those eight hours, there is generally about 15 minutes on each end which the teachers have to work on projects, un-hindered by the presence of pupils. How many 10 page papers could you read, edit, write comments on, and record in the grading system in 30 minutes a day?

I could grade one 10 page paper in 30 minutes. Maybe.

So lets say that a teacher two years ago had 32 students in his class. If he took half an hour per student to edit and grade their ten page paper, it would take him about 16 hours to complete his task. Sixteen hours is the equivalent of two full eight hour work days. There goes his weekend. Now lets say that this semester, the same teacher, earning the same salary, working the same job, but with higher taxes, fuel price, food prices, and rent, has 40 students in his class. He assigns the same assignment of a 10 page paper, except this time it takes him 4 hours longer to grade the papers, because he has another 8 students in his class. Why should he not be paid more? I don't really have a clue what any of you do, but I'd almost gaurantee that if you put in an extra 4 hours of work, on a weekend, then you would feel that you deserved more money than if you had not worked those extra 4 hours to be compensated.

I'd appreciate it if one of the teachers on the board could type for us a list of the classes he's taken in the last ten years, since being first hired as a teacher. These classes are taken in the summer, and REQUIRED by the employer. Well that really cuts into the old vacation now doesn't it??? So now what do we have? Say that the same teacher we talked about previously has 40 kids in his class, and a month long REQUIRED class coming up this summer. Now we have a man who works 40 hours a week, 20 hours on the weekend(more than two days work by industry standards), and a month long summer class. Add to that a contract which requires him to work a week after school gets out in the spring, and work a week before school starts in the fall, and what do you have???

A sixty hour work week for 9 months of the year with 40 kids running around.

A one month class in the summer, most likely also 40 hour weeks.

That puts us up to 10 months on and 2 months off.

Now subtract from that 2 months the week in the fall and week in the spring which the teacher is required to attend school without any students, and we're left with ten and a half months of work, and one and a half months of break.

Taking into account the sixty hour weeks during the 9 months which school is in session, having one and a half months off is really not very much, not much more time off than the average person would get by working 12 months a year with no homework on the weekends.

I'm not even going to start with the other responsibilities of a teacher, lesson planning, conferences, extra time spent with kids who need extra help. Don't think for a second that these duties don't add up to another easy 8 hours per week of "donated time."

I'm tired, so let me once again refresh the main points of all of this, attempting to answer the original question of, "why are they striking?"

Sometimes to get a raise, you have to go on strike. Ask millions of Americans who are a part of one union or another. They work just like you and I, and they want more money, don't tell me that you've never been un-satisfied with your pay.

They request an un-reasonable raise from the school district. Simple bargaining tactics, just like you or I would use when selling a boat, the seller asks more than he expects to get, the buyer counters with less than he expects to pay, they settle for a figure inbetween.

I've been trying to avoid throwing the classic, "And just think how important teachers are to your kids" line in here, but it does have a place.

Teachers don't sign any contracts which specify extra work hours, class sizes, or which courses in further education the school district will force them to take in the years to come. They do agree to a 40 hour work week 9 months of the year. Now you just think, hopefully understanding what I've written previously about a teacher's extra time spent outside the 40 hour week, and try to imagine how it would be if a teacher REFUSED to spend a second extra beyond the 40 hour a week contract.

If your child needed extra help after school, it would be REFUSED.

If you wanted to talk to your child's teacher when you got off work at 4 PM, it would be REFUSED.

If a teacher gave your child an F on and paper, and didn't take the time to comment on what to change or how to better it, then what? You can't learn without some help, and an F on a paper tells a child absolutely nothing about what needs to be changed or what he did wrong.

What this all boils down to is that teachers realize that in order to effectively do their job, they will have to give extra time to the students and to the program. Essentially, this is donated time outside of their 40 hour work week(how many of you get done with work on Friday and ask a little kid if he needs help learning to read?) Teachers know that they can just flunk a student if he can't read, and they also know that if they don't help that kid learn to read, then there's a good chance that no one else will.

So here's the deal. Teachers know that they'll work a bit of donated overtime, but if there are growing class sizes and fewer teachers, then teachers are expected to work more and more donated overtime. There will be a breaking point at which the teachers decide they're not getting paid enough. At this point, they go on strike, because you can be damn sure that no school district will say, "Oh, you look over-worked and underpaid, let me give you a raise."

So there you have it, they're on strike, they signed on willing to do a certain amount of work, and their bosses now want them to do more work. More work should equal more pay shouldn't it? I doubt that's a radical idea in anyone's book.

That's why teachers go on strike,

David

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#211927 - 09/22/03 09:12 AM Re: NFR Why are they striking?
glowball Offline
Spawner

Registered: 12/06/00
Posts: 783
Loc: bullcanyon
Well David I see you looked at this with a perspective of the worst possible senerio for the teachers. I remember doing one 10 page essay in school. 90% of the tive we got our papers back before the end of the day. So that blows that whole theory you had completely out of the water. Which gives them back "most" of their weekends and now we're back to a 9 month job.

Everyone that goes into a profession should and usually does know what they're getting themselves into.

I to agree that the teachers are important to our kids, but they aren't caring too much about the kids right now. Once again I ask why they don't work without a contract until they get it resolved as to not hurt the kids which are the big losers here.

As someone mentioned prior. What about the seniors? College? What about the kids who have summer jobs already lined out or will be looking come summertime? Think maybe they won't have a good shot at a summer job because by the time they get out of school the jobs will already be filled. HMMMMM never thought about that did you?

These aren't my kids but I do feel sorry for them.
_________________________
There's no head like steelhead!
Operations manager of coors light testing facility.

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#211928 - 09/22/03 10:04 AM Re: NFR Why are they striking?
nookie dreamin' Offline
Spawner

Registered: 06/04/02
Posts: 937
Loc: Everwet
I think we all need to step back and take a good look at what's happening here... Teachers are not the villians that most of these posts paint them to be. You want to know where your money is going? Ask your local school board about ADMINISTRATIVE salaries. Administrators never have to strike, because year in and year out, they get pay raises, usually board approved, that put them miles ahead of any of the highest paid teachers. And what do they do to warrant these raises? Attend meetings and browbeat the people in the trenches(teachers and support staff), for not doing things THEIR way. Then there are bonuses, handed out left and right for merely doing what is expected of them in their lofty positions. I know of one that received $60,000 for overseeing a future relocation of central administration staff to a new building. That is just one of the inequities going on DAILY in your local school districts.I think people should quit bashing teachers, and go to your school board and ask why are we paying administrators so much, when the people that we entrust with the molding of young minds get left further behind.
Why are there so many IMMSU's ( Ineffectual Middle Management Suck-Ups) making on average of 55-60K a year? Because the upper level admin needs to have ***-kissers surrounding them to insulate them from what should be a wary public. In closing, TALK TO YOUR SCHOOL BOARD!
_________________________
Present
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#211929 - 09/22/03 11:34 AM Re: NFR Why are they striking?
Skywalker Offline
Spawner

Registered: 03/10/01
Posts: 570
Loc: Snohomish, WA, USA
"I remember doing one 10 page essay in school. 90% of the tive we got our papers back before the end of the day. So that blows that whole theory you had completely out of the water. "

Only if you think that one 10 page paper is the ONLY time your teacher had to work past the 8hrs./day he/she was paid for.

I notice Marysville (school district) posts the top 20 teacher's salaries on their official site. It's impressive...I wish I made that much. On the surface it's sort of flies in the face of the teacher's complaints. I WOULD like to see what the bottom 20 are paid, though. Why don't they post that as well?

cfm, you play the baffle 'em with bullsh!t card well. Cut and paste, indeed.

If you could do me a favor and try and support your individual complaints, points, assertions, whatever you'd like to call them, individually, with your sources, it would help a lot. You never know, I might even agree with you on the grounds of your argument.

The old "here's my proof, it's up to you do dig through it and see which paragraph of the code supports each of my 50 anecdotal claims" just doesn't work well for someone with a busy life.

Thanks, I know you'll be supportive. wink

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#211931 - 09/22/03 01:49 PM Re: NFR Why are they striking?
fromcuthroattosteelies Offline
Returning Adult

Registered: 09/08/01
Posts: 456
Loc: olympia
As a teacher, I find this stuff rather entertaining. I will continue to keep my mouth shut......However, the beginning of this post discussed the state salary schedule for teachers. This is my fourth year and I am making far less than previous posts indicated. However, I'm not complaining. The whole strike issue stems from many issues that I don't expect the common lay person to understand. I'm not going to get into it, but teachers do have a valid point. In the meantime, I'm just going to keep being the best teacher I can be and continue to fish like a crazed maniac....
Cuttie
_________________________
Another patient exhibiting symptoms of the steelhead virus.

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