My complaint with the Union is it holds back the worker that excels tying him to weak workers with tenure ruling in most cases. That directly counters what should drive a free market mentality in which the country was founded upon.
"musccy" wrote:
You could flip that around though, and what's the incentive for a school district to hire someone with a masters, years of experience, or who sought additional training through workshops, etc? They come at an added cost.
I see the points made about the entitlement and complacency that could accompany unions, but the alternative can encourage a situation where cheap, inexperienced, naiive labor is adventageous to a company or school motivated to maximize profits.
"Pack93z" wrote:
In the non union environment there are many jobs that hold requirements to hold said position. Public schools are founded upon the premise of teaching our youth and ensuring the future of this country. That shapes their main focus, not a profit and bottom line.
If teaching is your desire in life, which it is for many, you more than likely are going to be in it for those rewards more than the income compensation tied to it. And for the majority it is, and those are the ones that you desire teaching the youth over a tenured teachers just coasting until retirement and not interested in the main goal.. teaching.
I have no issue with funding the school district and the teachers via my property tax each year. I have no issue with treating the teachers fairly and equally to those in the private sector. None.
But if the cost is imbalanced to the rest of society in the benefits they receive and thus the cost to me, which in essence is getting double hit with the health care burden (Paying mine and theirs via tax dollar) than yes I will speak in opposition and ask that it be more in sync with society.
But then again, I wish the health care system to be reformed overall to control costs for all to ensure that all can afford proper health care and not go without because of cost.. and cost alone.
Now on the Union subject of the teachers themselves, set a standard in which the teachers that truly go above are rewarded verse the one just bidding time waiting for retirement, and reward those rightfully excelling over the others.. I would be more pro union.
Instead, they are compensated more on tenure than merit.
Of course that is not the only issue with the American workforce.. as there are many crooked bastards sitting in the cushy leather chair pulling the strings and cheating their employees like a replaceable pawn.
But just like Walker may be learning.. don't bite off more than you can chew in one sitting. In place.. start aligning the pieces one by one to start to place the issues in check.
"The oranges are dry; the apples are mealy; and the papayas... I don't know what's going on with the papayas!"