Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is a Maryland state law that makes strikes illegal due to the disruption is would cause.
The unions help negotiate salary, benefits and work conditions as well as making sure admin follows the rules including when trying to get rid of a bad teacher. Oftentimes admin screws up the process or doesn’t really want to deal with the process so they end up keeping the teacher instead.
So instead they all just quit? Sounds like a crappy law.
Quitting is far better than striking. For everyone.
Tell that to the kids without IEPs being fulfilled, or kids being herded like cattle from room to room because they have no singular teacher, or the teachers that are still there doing twice the work ready to quit too. Sounds great!
Anonymous wrote:There’s only so much money to go around, and the elementary school and english teachers are scared that STEM and SPED positions will get most of the raises if they separate pay scales by area.
Maryland law prohibits teacher’s unions from organizing a strike. If you don’t like the job, then find a new job, just like any other professional would do.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is a Maryland state law that makes strikes illegal due to the disruption is would cause.
The unions help negotiate salary, benefits and work conditions as well as making sure admin follows the rules including when trying to get rid of a bad teacher. Oftentimes admin screws up the process or doesn’t really want to deal with the process so they end up keeping the teacher instead.
So instead they all just quit? Sounds like a crappy law.
Quitting is far better than striking. For everyone.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Take a deep dive in the county budget and you’ll quickly notice that the biggest chunks go to schools, police and firefighters combined.
Step back and look at the shifting demographics and notice the trends promoting scarcity: older, whiter, wealthier residents are dying or relocating outside of the county and state while younger, immigrant, poorer residents are increasing (some of whom don’t pay taxes because they deal in cash-based industries).
The MoCo of the 1980s is gone. We aren’t as affluent as we were because our tax base has changed. Nonetheless, Annapolis still thinks we are rolling in cash and we consistently get shortchanged. MoCo has done a noble job of supplementing mcps when the state falls short, but it’s not enough.
So, tell me how to come up with money to increase teacher salaries? I’m totally for it btw.
An appropriation won’t happen. How about incentives where we can draw upon other resources? Why not implement full ride scholarships or loan forgiveness for teachers who commit two decades of service? Why not offer a tax break or stipend? Or a special mortgage program? Heck, why not invest in a mixed use housing development where young teachers have free or heavily subsidized housing?
Great ideas. Why is the union advocating for some of these ideas? They seem very reasonable to me.
Look up the federal TEACH grant. It’s not perfect but that’s what it’s intended to do. There are also states that offer similar aid programs for teachers
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is a Maryland state law that makes strikes illegal due to the disruption is would cause.
The unions help negotiate salary, benefits and work conditions as well as making sure admin follows the rules including when trying to get rid of a bad teacher. Oftentimes admin screws up the process or doesn’t really want to deal with the process so they end up keeping the teacher instead.
So instead they all just quit? Sounds like a crappy law.
Anonymous wrote:There is a Maryland state law that makes strikes illegal due to the disruption is would cause.
The unions help negotiate salary, benefits and work conditions as well as making sure admin follows the rules including when trying to get rid of a bad teacher. Oftentimes admin screws up the process or doesn’t really want to deal with the process so they end up keeping the teacher instead.
Anonymous wrote:They skipped striking and went straight to quitting.
Anonymous wrote:My cousin is an Asst. Principal in Florida. She has 20 years of experience and makes 70K. It’s all relative and MCPS should be recruiting like mad from the don’t say gay state.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They skipped striking and went straight to quitting.
Teachers in Montgomery county can't strike
Ok. They cant strike. So if they strike, they MCPS fires them. Then we have no teachers. MCPS could not possibly fill the entire school system with licensed teachers without drawing from the existing teacher base. Maybe they could hire veterans like they’re doing in Florida but I don’t know how a veteran with no experience is going to be able teach AP Physcis….
How can you prevent people from striking?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think we all can agree that teachers deserve a higher salary. I think we also can agree that there is a teacher shortage and that some positions are harder to fill than others.
What is the purpose of the teachers union? Why are they not advocating for higher pay? I hear that MCPS teachers cannot strike-why not? Doesn’t that take away the biggest bargaining chip the union has? Why does it seam that the teachers union is not helping to support the teachers?
MCPS teachers have an association whose powers have been limited by the state much more than employees in a traditional "union" such as SEIU which is , I believe, related to AFL-CIO.t Traditional unions have much more power and many more staff working for employee concerns.
Maryland prohibits teacher striking and other powers that traditional unions used.
MCEA has very limited staff and is mostly composed of volunteers who are also full time teachers. MCPS keeps drawing out and complicating procedures that were pro forma in the past. Many times these volunteers are putting extra hours into the MCEA business meetings as mcps does not communicate, show to meetings, etc while also having to keep up their teaching jobs in today's climate and raise families at home. MCPS can keep this up and hope that attrition gives them the upper hand, they are on the clock and not relying on countless volunteer hours from members with increasingly demanding full time jobs.
There are many great ideas about teacher retention. However, there are limited actions that any organization can take when their role is circumscribed by state regulations and their traditional work (e.g. collective bargaining) is blocked by such actions as the other side failing to show up to the meetings, not responding in a timely manner, and other things that consistently show mcps to not be working in good faith in negotiations.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They skipped striking and went straight to quitting.
Teachers in Montgomery county can't strike