Sunlight on Board-Union Contract Negotiations

School Board Transparency

February 3rd, 2010 at 2:50 pm

Penn Hills strike call shows secrecy’s hidden costs

If you want the quickest possible look at what’s wrong with how most school district contracts with teacher unions are negotiated, read two sentences from an online news item published by a Pittsburgh area television station.

The story is about a teachers strike called for tomorrow, February 4, in the Penn Hills SD (Allegheny County). Here are the two sentences:

The district said in a statement that the teachers trimmed their salary requests from 15 percent to 6 percent a year after it became public.

“Don’t believe everything you read by the board,” Union spokesman Butch Santicola told KDKA-TV. “It’s designed to misdirect and miscommunicate and put pressure on the teachers.”

What’s wrong here?

The first of those sentences is based on a statement at the board website, published on February 2:

Prior to December of 2009, the District had withdrawn several of their proposed changes and agreed to contract language proposed by the Teachers’ Union, but the Teachers’ Union made no changes except to reduce its wage demand from 15% a year to 6% a year but only after the 15% demand was publicized.

One problem is that it appears that the school board waited a long time to expose an initially outrageous salary demand — a 15% pay raise the union would not have dared to make in public. If so, this is a textbook example of how closed-doors negotiations allow a union to stall…and stall…and stall — all while maintaining a public posture of reasonableness. The articles I found online suggest that as soon as the board publicized that 15% demand last summer, the union lowered it dramatically. Here’s a news report of the union response:

After school officials revealed details of the union’s initial salary and benefits request, the union’s representatives asked board members and other officials to sign an agreement not to speak publicly about the talks.

No surprise there. Any private party (e.g., a building contractor, a fuel oil supplier, or an insurance company) making a non-competitive bid for public money would prefer to have its bid kept confidential until after it’s been accepted.

Now consider the second sentence from he article: Mr. Santicola’s implication that the board statement is false, or at least misleading. For all I know, he may be right. So why doesn’t he correct the record by publishing the actual union position?

If there’s a strike, and it looks as if there will be, the Penn Hill kids and their parents will be hurt. The public doesn’t have to know about every tentative idea and every trial balloon floated in the process of trying to read an agreement. The public is entitled to read and evaluate all written, potentially binding proposals made by both the union and the board. There’s no excuse for a process that asks the public to take sides based on unsupported charges, counter-charges, rumors and insinuations.

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