Las Vegas Review-Journal

Teacher union civil war

Locals drop out of state labor group

- Paul Grasewicz Las Vegas Stuart J. Ghertner Henderson

There’s an unexpected group urging Clark County School District teachers to opt out of their local union: the state teachers union. On Wednesday, 796 teachers out of 18,718 voted to determine whether the Clark County Education Associatio­n should disaffilia­te with the state and national teachers union. Of that small percentage of teachers voting, 88 percent favored forming a local-only union. That union will represent teachers during collective bargaining and in disciplina­ry disputes. It will also decrease teacher dues from $810 a year to $510.

This breakup has been a long time coming. The CCEA and the Nevada State Education Associatio­n have been at loggerhead­s for almost a year. As by far the largest local, the CCEA sent 70 percent of its members’ dues to the NSEA and its parent, the National Education Associatio­n. The CCEA’S leadership wanted control over more of those funds. The dispute previously spilled into public view when there were quarrels over lobbying priorities, endorsemen­ts in the Democratic gubernator­ial primary and ongoing lawsuits.

Now deprived of its largest union, the state teachers union took an unusual step on Thursday. It urged educators to drop their CCEA membership on July 1. Union membership is optional, but once teachers join, they may opt out only by submitting written notice from July 1 to 15. The NSEA then wants teachers to join a new local teachers union affiliated with it and the NEA.

This union civil war shows that no single organizati­on — whether the new local-only union or the state teachers union — speaks for teachers. Teachers have never been the unified political bloc that its leadership claimed or that union political donations suggested. What does it say about teacher interest in the union that 95 percent of them either couldn’t or didn’t bother to vote in Wednesday’s election?

State lawmakers should recognize this and reform collective bargaining accordingl­y. An organizati­on that has split in two and that most teachers can’t be bothered with shouldn’t have the ability to determine compensati­on levels for every educator. Legislator­s should change state law to fully empower school districts to create compensati­on packages for their employees. That would allow the district to reward top performers or incentiviz­e skilled educators who move to low-performing schools.

Fortunatel­y, teachers don’t have to wait until next year to see the benefits of these new developmen­ts. As the Review-journal’s Meghin Delaney reported, both unions are trying to attract members by promising “bottom-up leadership, better benefits and improved working conditions.” Amazing what a little competitio­n does.

This week’s lesson: There’s a big difference between teachers and the unions that claim to represent them. Class dismissed.

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Then Mr. Ralenkotte­r tells the authority audit committee that he would “never intentiona­lly do anything” to embarrass the organizati­on. How do you unintentio­nally take gift cards to pay for your family’s airline tickets?

It really is time for new management of the authority and new members on the oversight board. But the board is largely comprised of local elected officials who aren’t going to give up all the perks — e.g. first-class trips overseas — that they gain as members.

So it is just a matter of time until the next extravagan­t use of tax revenue by the authority is exposed. paranoid view of the world around him.

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