Anonymous wrote:The unions failed spectacularly in their bargaining. They allowed FCPS to give 5% raises to nonunion members like central office staff and accepted cuts in school staff that make teachers jobs harder.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm a member of FCFT and the new president is excellent, IMO. She brought real passion to the table and did some amazing organizing before she was elected, and I'm really optimistic about what she will do in office.
The union is only as strong as its members. We need every teacher to join and get involved, to advocate for yourself, for the profession, for our students, and for our community. Teachers in FCPS have accepted being beaten up, rolled over thrown under the bus, and shortchanged for far too long, this year included. With collective bargaining we have taken a step forward, but again that strength is only as meaningful as the people who actually turn out to budget hearings, speak up at meetings turn up to knock on doors for elections, and speak up when a bunch of anti-union trolls show up in comments sections like here.
Is that the one that wanted schools closed until there was “zero Covid”?
Anonymous wrote:I'm a member of FCFT and the new president is excellent, IMO. She brought real passion to the table and did some amazing organizing before she was elected, and I'm really optimistic about what she will do in office.
The union is only as strong as its members. We need every teacher to join and get involved, to advocate for yourself, for the profession, for our students, and for our community. Teachers in FCPS have accepted being beaten up, rolled over thrown under the bus, and shortchanged for far too long, this year included. With collective bargaining we have taken a step forward, but again that strength is only as meaningful as the people who actually turn out to budget hearings, speak up at meetings turn up to knock on doors for elections, and speak up when a bunch of anti-union trolls show up in comments sections like here.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm a member of FCFT and the new president is excellent, IMO. She brought real passion to the table and did some amazing organizing before she was elected, and I'm really optimistic about what she will do in office.
The union is only as strong as its members. We need every teacher to join and get involved, to advocate for yourself, for the profession, for our students, and for our community. Teachers in FCPS have accepted being beaten up, rolled over thrown under the bus, and shortchanged for far too long, this year included. With collective bargaining we have taken a step forward, but again that strength is only as meaningful as the people who actually turn out to budget hearings, speak up at meetings turn up to knock on doors for elections, and speak up when a bunch of anti-union trolls show up in comments sections like here.
How? The only way I've heard to "advocate" is to beg the people who make decisions to consider staff points of view. And then the BOS/SB/superintendent says "Thank you for your time" and then does what they were going to do anyway.
I mean, suppose all 15,000ish teachers joined the union. We all cry that we need more money/smaller classes/more planning time. Then the BOS says, "We can't afford to give you that" and the school board says, "Sorry, can't afford that." Unless everyone is willing to quit (they aren't, pay checks are important), what is the point? What other bargaining chip do we have besides threatening to be super angry?
When the union has a better plan than "ask your SB member to support this!", maybe I'd be willing to pay nearly $1000 a year. Until then, I can send my own emails AND save $1000.
And, in a few years the bargaining chip will be for the SB to give the union leaders even more time off to do union work. And, you will pay for them to go to expensive conferences. And, then, just like our SB and Superintendent, they will need larger well paid administrative staffs to conduct the union business--so that the "teachers can get better pay." Except that the only people who really benefit are those running the unions.
Retired teacher who has seen this in action.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm a member of FCFT and the new president is excellent, IMO. She brought real passion to the table and did some amazing organizing before she was elected, and I'm really optimistic about what she will do in office.
The union is only as strong as its members. We need every teacher to join and get involved, to advocate for yourself, for the profession, for our students, and for our community. Teachers in FCPS have accepted being beaten up, rolled over thrown under the bus, and shortchanged for far too long, this year included. With collective bargaining we have taken a step forward, but again that strength is only as meaningful as the people who actually turn out to budget hearings, speak up at meetings turn up to knock on doors for elections, and speak up when a bunch of anti-union trolls show up in comments sections like here.
How? The only way I've heard to "advocate" is to beg the people who make decisions to consider staff points of view. And then the BOS/SB/superintendent says "Thank you for your time" and then does what they were going to do anyway.
I mean, suppose all 15,000ish teachers joined the union. We all cry that we need more money/smaller classes/more planning time. Then the BOS says, "We can't afford to give you that" and the school board says, "Sorry, can't afford that." Unless everyone is willing to quit (they aren't, pay checks are important), what is the point? What other bargaining chip do we have besides threatening to be super angry?
When the union has a better plan than "ask your SB member to support this!", maybe I'd be willing to pay nearly $1000 a year. Until then, I can send my own emails AND save $1000.
Anonymous wrote:I'm a member of FCFT and the new president is excellent, IMO. She brought real passion to the table and did some amazing organizing before she was elected, and I'm really optimistic about what she will do in office.
The union is only as strong as its members. We need every teacher to join and get involved, to advocate for yourself, for the profession, for our students, and for our community. Teachers in FCPS have accepted being beaten up, rolled over thrown under the bus, and shortchanged for far too long, this year included. With collective bargaining we have taken a step forward, but again that strength is only as meaningful as the people who actually turn out to budget hearings, speak up at meetings turn up to knock on doors for elections, and speak up when a bunch of anti-union trolls show up in comments sections like here.
Anonymous wrote:Teacher . . . 20+ years in FCPS. I would avoid both and avoid FCPS politics as much as possible.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm a member of FCFT and the new president is excellent, IMO. She brought real passion to the table and did some amazing organizing before she was elected, and I'm really optimistic about what she will do in office.
The union is only as strong as its members. We need every teacher to join and get involved, to advocate for yourself, for the profession, for our students, and for our community. Teachers in FCPS have accepted being beaten up, rolled over thrown under the bus, and shortchanged for far too long, this year included. With collective bargaining we have taken a step forward, but again that strength is only as meaningful as the people who actually turn out to budget hearings, speak up at meetings turn up to knock on doors for elections, and speak up when a bunch of anti-union trolls show up in comments sections like here.
Is FCFT the union whose officer publicly supported boundary changes? Why on earth would I support such an extreme organization?
I support unions generally, but hope that your union slithers back to the hole it came from.
Anonymous wrote:I'm a member of FCFT and the new president is excellent, IMO. She brought real passion to the table and did some amazing organizing before she was elected, and I'm really optimistic about what she will do in office.
The union is only as strong as its members. We need every teacher to join and get involved, to advocate for yourself, for the profession, for our students, and for our community. Teachers in FCPS have accepted being beaten up, rolled over thrown under the bus, and shortchanged for far too long, this year included. With collective bargaining we have taken a step forward, but again that strength is only as meaningful as the people who actually turn out to budget hearings, speak up at meetings turn up to knock on doors for elections, and speak up when a bunch of anti-union trolls show up in comments sections like here.