Suit seeks to break union monopoly on public sector workers
After spending nearly three decades teaching first graders, Rebecca Friedrichs is suing to opt out of the union she was forced to join in 1988.
Her doubts about teacher unions started in college when she shadowed a teacher at an elementary school.
“The teacher [in the neighboring classroom] was frightening in how she dealt with the children, very aggressive, even physically. I was a naïve college student, so I asked my master teacher about it. She told me about tenure and how it was incredibly difficult to fire anyone,” she said. “The kids were out of luck.”
Friedrichs put the incident behind her and began teaching full-time in Orange County, CA. public schools in 1988, but remained distrustful of the concept of tenure and the forces that fight to keep bad teachers in classrooms. She joined the California Teachers Association as a condition of employment, but paid partial dues known as agency fees, which represent the percentage of dues that pays for employee representation while leaving out the costs of political activities.
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Unions are a double edged sword. On one hand they can protect good, hard working people from being taken advantage of by corporations that only care about profits. On the other hand they protect lazy, horrible workers who give a bad name to anything.
ReplyDeleteThat is why you need good union leaders who know how to spot the useless ones, a good relationship between the union, and the job, and a good contract that helps people, while giving room to get rid of the junk that accumulates.
If only we lived in a perfect world......
would like to see the teachers unions backs broken soon. useless and takes our hard earned dollars. don't agree with anything they stand for and spend our money on. very liberal and wasteful.
ReplyDeleteThe MSEA is downright dishonest
ReplyDeleteTell me what the difference is between unions and the mob?
ReplyDeleteThe mob has some dignity and ethics
ReplyDelete