Reform Group? - Amityville Teachers Association
Transcription
Reform Group? - Amityville Teachers Association
The union that cares Vol. 13 Issue 1 October 2012 the Scribe The Award Winning Newsletter of the Amityville Teachers Association • Local 2466 • NYSUT • AFT • AFL-CIO Inside Grievance Report Reform Group? ATA Happenings Every Friday wear your red ATA shirt OCTOBER 25, 2012 STOP THE CAP, CLOSE THE GAP Greetings everyone! I am really glad that my transition to president has been uneventful! Kidding. I have walked right into a negotiations breakdown locally, an APPR fiasco state-wide, and an overall attack on the teaching profession nationally. Each one of these issues by itself is a large problem. Collectively they have been taking up much of my time and I promise to be more visible in the future. First let’s start with negotiations. Without getting into specifics because they will be covered in a general membership meeting (or may have already) the negotiations team ultimately thought that too much was being asked for by the BOE. I thank you all for your patience during the first couple of weeks of the year because we were very close. We must now start the process again. With the new website I intend on performing our polls and questionnaires on the secure Moodle section. That should be more efficient and allow members to have discussions about things without all having to be in the same place or more importantly, through the grapevine. Regarding APPR, I have allowed the Mandatory Professional Developments to fall within the 30 day window because I believe they benefit the members. Any PD that does not deal specifically with APPR or SLOs and does not follow contractual language should be reported to your Building Vice President at once. Let’s discuss the assault on the teaching profession. Part of this assault is the Tax Cap. Placing a 2% (or less) cap on a district when much of the budget is teachers’ salaries speaks volumes. This in addition to the decrease in state funding and fictitious Race To The Top money is turning out to be disastrous to our district. Really? No Business Department? Also, the super-majority vote means that the minority of residents could rule the majority. It will be near impossible to regain the programs, maintain the buildings, and fully staff the district as long as there is this Tax Cap. Our first step as an Association should be to join our forces to help in any way we can to destroy it. One reason it is even around is because we didn’t fight it when we could. Out of nearly 600,000 NYSUT members in New York, elected officials looked at only 15,000 letters, faxes and emails from them. I have been in the audience of a few politicians who have reminded us that they have been inundated with phone call letters, and emails from those in support of the tax cap. If they don’t honor those constituents, they lose those votes. So, if WE are LOUD and VOCAL, they will have to honor our point of view and VOTE OUR WAY! Your voice matters! There was no support for those politicians who were against it. Further, NYSUT reported that nearly 84% of Long Island NYSUT members supported a tax cap! Wow! As a result across New York State 30,000 educators have lost their jobs. I still can’t believe that number! Make no mistake about it, it is affecting us in Amityville. What we are doing to fight the Cap is supporting the group EDUCATE NY NOW. This purpose of this group is to ”unify parents, students, educators, administrators, unions, school board members, community organizations, civil rights groups, education advocates and others statewide around a broad-based campaign to demand that our state government fulfill New York’s constitutional obligation to provide all students with a quality education”. On October 25, 2012 we are going to have a rally at the High School from 4-4:45PM called “Stop The Cap, Close The Gap”. We will have speakers there to talk about the potentially disastrous effects of the Tax Cap. Your presence is urgently needed! Please make time to support our union and this cause by joining us for just 45 minutes on October 25. Visit http://educatenynow.org for more ammo. Very Truly Yours, Robert Claps 2 Scribe October 2012 Grievance Report ATA HAPPENINGS Grievance #2011-01 Issue: Summer ELA Program, no compensation for 3 hour scheduled orientation period. - Filed Step 1 on September 1, 2011 - Filed Step 2 on October 6, 2011 - Filed Step 3 on November 1, 2011 - Hearing at BOE meeting December 8th, 2012 - Waiting for BOE response - Arbitration Date: October 16, 2012 Saturday September 15, 2012 the Copiague Chamber of Commerce held its Family Festival. The Amityville Teachers’ Association was represented by Lynda Mussen, Nancy Finizio, Colleen Kretz and Bob Claps to promote public awareness to our issues. Grievance #2011-3 Issue: Teacher was sent home for violating a non-existing dress code. - Filed Step 1 on September 1, 2011 - Filed Step 2 on October 6, 2011 - Filed Step 3 on November 1, 2011 - Hearing at BOE meeting December 8, 2012 - Waiting for BOE response - Waiting for arbitration date. The ATA had a vendor spot for Amityville’s Applefest October 6, 2012. Bob set the table up at 8:30am for the 10am start. Applefest is run by the Amityville Rotary Club and the Amityville Chamber of Commerce and Amityville Historical Society joined in to make it a huge success. Grievance #2011-6 Issue: Additional 6th class assignments were given to staff members through virtual electives. - Filed Step 1 December 8th, 2011 - Denied by district December 23, 2011 - Filed Step 2 January 9, 2012. - Step 2 denied on January 24, 2012 - Program was cancelled during school hours. - Program was offered to to staff after school. - Grievance is in abeyance as of March 20, 2012. - Filed Step 3 February 7, 2012 - Step 3 denied April 26, 2012 - Waiting for BOE response. GO TO: Our annual “Back To School Bash” was held August 22, 2012 in the Park Avenue Memorial Elementary School. We handed out hundreds of school supplies to the children of the Amityville Schools. http://amityvilleteachers.org/wordpress Teacher savings Check out NYSUT Member Benefits for discounts on travel, car rentals, movies, museums, books and more. Go to NYSUT.com and click on “Member Benefits” or directly to http://www.nysut.org/cps/rde/xchg/nysut/ hs.xsl/49.htm The Scribe is published four times a year by the Amityville Teachers Association 74 Merrick Rd. Amityville, NY 11701 (631) 691-0021 www.amityville teachers.org Articles, photos or letters to the editor are welcome and may be addressed to: The Scribe Amityville Teachers Association 74 Merrick Rd. Amityville, NY 11701 or e-mail - [email protected] Grievance #2011-2 Issue: Teacher was sent home for violating a non-existing dress code. - Filed Step 1 onSeptember 1,2011 - Filed Step 2 on October 6, 2011 - Filed Step 3 on November 1, 2011 - Hearing at BOE meeting December 8, 2012 - Waiting for BOE response - Waiting for arbitration date. For Local news and blogging. Log on and leave your comments about local and national issues. The Scribe is the voice of your local union. The contents are intended for its membership and are not allowed to be reprinted without permission of the editor. Editorials appearing in The Scribe reflect the opinion of its leadership. Articles about members and their concerns are welcome and should contribute positively to the welfare of this union and its members. We welcome Letters to the Editor, however they must be signed. We will withhold names upon request. We reserve the right to edit any submission and reply to those that seem to reflect a misunderstanding of the union and its politics. The Scribe may include reprints of articles from other educational publications. Scribe 3 October 2012 REFORM GROUP? DON’T BE FOOLED! By Sylvia Saunders and Darryl McGrath - NYSUT United - September 24, 2012 Their names may sound positive, but don’t be fooled. Big-money groups with anti-union, anti-public education agendas are cropping up and mobilizing around the state. Here’s what you need to know about some of the major groups: StudentsFirst NY DFER StudentsFirst NY, an arm of the national StudentsFirst organization headed by former Washington, D.C., Chancellor Michelle Rhee, was officially formed this spring “to counter the influence of the teachers’ union in New York,” according to a headline in The New York Times. State Director Micah Lasher, the former director of state legislative affairs for New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg, said the group’s aim is to raise $10 million annually for five years. Democrats for Education Reform is a secretive, corporate-backed political action committee that attacks retirement security and public education. On the board are some polarizing figures in public education including Rhee, former chancellor Joel Klein (now a News Corp executive) and Eva Moskowitz, a former New York City councilwoman who now runs charter schools. Other board members are hedge fund managers Daniel Loeb and Paul Tudor Jones, founders of the Robin Hood Foundation. Once Obama supporters, Loeb and Jones have crossed party lines to help the Republicans defeat him in this year’s election. One of the group’s first actions in New York was to urge people to call for an end to senority-based layoffs for teachers. NYCAN The New York Campaign for Achievement Now, or NYCAN, opened in New York this year thanks to $1.2 million in backing from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and the Walton Family Foundation. NYCAN is based on existing models in Connecticut, Minnesota and Rhode Island, where the group took credit for a 20 percent increase in state funding for charter schools, winning two new alternate certification routes for teachers and principals, and overhauls of teacher evaluation systems. Here in New York, NYCAN Executive Director Christina Grant is pushing “parent trigger” legislation that would allow a majority of parents at chronically underperforming schools to choose from several reform options, including converting the school into a charter school, firing the school administration or closing the school outright. Grant previously worked for Teach for America, a KIPP charter school and Uncommon Schools. NYCAN’s national affiliate, 50CAN, reported retaining an Albany lobbyist, Vincent Marrone, for $4,100 per month. Marrone represents a wide range of clients including the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and NYC Charter School Center. In New York, DFER pushed the ill-conceived tax cap that is crippling schools. The group’s New York branch is headed by Elizabeth Ling, a board director in the Harlem Success Academy charter school network and former banking financier. The group’s chief aim is to push aside teacher unions and advocate for vouchers, merit pay, nonunion charter schools and curbs on tenure. The board includes a “who’s who” of superrich hedgefund managers and charter school proponents, including Whitney Tilson, a board member of the National Alliance for Public Charter Schools and New York’s KIPP Academy Charter Schools. Tilson has called charters “the perfect philanthropy for results-oriented business executives ... Hedge funds are always looking for ways to turn a small amount of capital into a large amount of capital.” Philanthropist Eli Broad, whose foundation gave more than $500,000 to plug advocacy related to the pseudodocumentary “Waiting for Superman” and the procharter film “The Lottery,” is a major backer of Education Reform Now, DFER’s nonprofit sister organization. Committee to Save New York The very name of the group is deceptively appealing. Hasn’t the state been in dire financial straits for the last three years? Isn’t there a real need to right a number of fiscal wrongs in New York and fix a political system many astute observers say is broken? The answers to those questions are yes and yes. But the answer to New York’s problems is almost certainly not the Committee to Save New York, a well-funded lobbying group that has spent millions on television and print ads this year to promote Gov. Cuomo’s political agenda. The group’s website, www.letsfixalbany.org, lists a “great education” among the assets of a strong state, and cites the property tax cap as one path to political and fiscal reform. NYSUT agrees that a great education for all New Yorkers is a hallmark of a strong state economy. But what the Committee to Save New York website doesn’t tell you is that the property tax cap — which NYSUT strongly opposed — is depriving public schools of the funds they need to meet more rigorous standards. 24 Scribe October 2012 Mark The Date Congratulations to: John and Janine Katsigiorgis on the birth of their son Stelio. UPDATE Local Action Project LAP Objectives: LAP is designed to develop strong programs in membership involvment, communications, media and public relations, community outreach, coalition building and political action. October 27th is the Homecoming Parade at 12:15 October 23rd AMHS Newsday Marching Band Festival 7pm @ Hofstra November 9th End of First Quarter December 13-21 Music Winter Concerts Helping To Build A Better Union Planned LAP activities: - Union sponsored TGIFs, - Recognize honor roll students grades 1st-12th, - ATA awards night, Watch for dates on upcoming events. - Police and Fire-Department recognition - Making Strides Breast Cancer Walk - ATA outreach programs Participate and Stand United! Register now for Share My Lesson By Sylvia Saunders - NYSUT United - September 24, 2012 There’s a trusted place for educators to turn for a fresh approach to an old lesson, a place that’s a little like a desktop faculty room to share great ideas and create a community. Developed by teachers, for teachers, Share My Lesson was launched over the summer by the American Federation of Teachers and TES Connect, and already has more than 250,000 resources. It’s a free digital platform that allows educators around the country to collaborate and share teaching resources and innovative ideas. AFT’s Heidi Glidden said content will be supplemented by tens of thousands of contributions from hundreds of content partners, including Sesame Street and Encyclopedia Britannica. Users are also encouraged to form special interest communities, such as music teachers or English-as-a-Second-Language educators. “It provides an instant practitioner-based way for teachers to collaborate on a national and global level.” “We encourage all our members to register and join in this professional community,” said NYSUT Vice President Maria Neira. For a limited time, registrants at www.sharemylesson.com are eligible for a number of prizes, including a grand prize of $5,000 toward a student loan or a $3,500 gift card. Contact your ATA ATA Office hours Monday thru Friday from 1:00 - 4:30 74 Merrick Rd (above Key Computing ) Please call 691-0021 Robert Claps - President [email protected] Legislative Council Robert Claps ATA President - NE Carol Seehof Vice President -NW Marc Engler Secretary - PAMES George Alexander Treasurer - PAMES Northeast Colleen Kretz - BVP Dyan Aversa - Asst. Northwest Franca Adams - BVP Jennifer Callahan - Asst. Park Ave. Donna Sohm - BVP Kerry Moore - Asst. BVP EWMMS Beth Cunningham - BVP Lynda Mussen - Asst. Karen Starkey - Asst. AMHS Jenn Trotman - BVP Andrew Akapnitis - Asst. NYSUT/AFT Rep Lynda Mussen Tina Smith Webmaster Shannon Reilly Sick Bank Chair Linda Pfaffe LAP Coordinators Kathleen Thorn Marisa Krepil E lections I rene W inter E ditor Jolene Maccarone
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