Monday, September 7, 2020

Another "win".

On Tuesday, when not very many people were paying attention, the UFT checked another box off of it's massive "Important Agreements That Must Be Reached" to do list: What to do with teachers who have quarantined family members.


Before we get into that, let's review the agreements reached over the summer:

First, the DOE and UFT decided to make it easy on teachers who could get sick and who could die. 

The medical accommodation agreement went online and turned months into weeks. This doesn't get enough attention because it only applies to about 15% of the workforce. But that was a total heart-felt-meets-government-policy action. It typically takes months for an accomodation to go through. For many, it tooks days and it was 100% guided through UFT negotiations. 95% of the applicants were accepted and the UFT assisted with appeals for those who were denied. 


Then, the DOE and UFT decided on a composition of teachers. 

It created three teacher roles and another role called "Virtual Content Specialist. I called the job a "good deal -maybe" because, while it looks good on paper, I don't expect it to be implemented in very many schools at all. It is an enormous task and the timeframe for schools is just too short. 

In addition to that, when you peel the onion back just a bit, you may realize that school-based staff all across the city have just given up on all of the systems around them. There is a mistrust and this "mistrust" that is being spoken of about the mayor, actually extends to the DOE, all 3 major unions and even beyond. And, just like I predicted, most school communities, seeing impossible-to-understand guidelines, will just turned inward to seek their own solutions. So it's a nice deal if you can make it happen! But many schools won't be able to. 

Then the deal about this strike was reached.  

See now, I came down a bit hard on my union when I wrote

I'm sure the UFT will find the best the deal they can. I'm sure, when it arrives, that they'll assure us that it was the very best deal they could make under the circumstances. I'm sure we'll mostly be fine when we go back and I'm absolutely sure that any voices expressing dismay will be quickly quelled with the sudden magical appearance of UFT Unity loyalists on social media -folks who don't know how to defend a teacher but who sure as hell know how to ridicule them- shaming them into silence.

So I feel a little bad. Truth is the union did reach the best deal they could. They ensured that teachers can have a safe environment to go back to. They made it as safe as anyone could make a school under these circumstances. No place, during pestilence, is safe. It is ridiculous to open schools. That said, the mayor wants to open and the UFT sees their job as making sure that the policy is as fair (and as safe) as it can be made. 

Was this a sellout? Oh, no.  While I was right about those Unity loyalists, they will also be the first to remind you that the UFT never ever wanted or advocated for remote learning in the first place. That's true! The UFT never lifted one finger to try to get blended learning. All they promised was no return if we weren't safe. And they kept that promise.

Did they realize that all these teachers wanted remote learning because they are scared for their health? Yes. But they never promised anything like remote learning, did they? They only promised no return if the buildings weren't safe. That's all they promised. Well they should have known that people wanted full remote. Didn't they see all of our posts? No yeah. They saw your posts. They know what you wanted.  If you wanted more than that, move to Chicago or LA, where that union refuses to let its members go back until this virus has ended. Here in New York, we were given no such union and we were given no such promise. Suck it up people. It's only September and like I said: Promise delivered. 

Now the deal for teachers who need more accomodations at home.

And that leads me to this week's very quiet deal. The DOE quietly updated their personal memorandum on September 1st. It includes a lot of help for people who have "symptoms" but have not tested positive for COVID. It Those folks get 2 weeks without dedication to their CAR. So, they can be sick, under care awaiting a test with no deduction to the CAR (don't forget, those CAR days are our compensation that is deferred for other things, like a day off. So not losing those days is a lot like not losing a day's pay. I'm not sure if you have work remotely during that time or not. That's something you'll have to look into. There is a link to the document here. 


And if you have a child care issue, the DoE is offering an application for 2/3 pay through the same memorandum. 

It's Labor Day. These things don't just happen because the sky is blue. They happen because there was a union saying "no". 


I say "win" because the better win would have been to keep school's closed until at least indoor dining and in-person classes at college resume (I teach high school. That's a bit easier for me to say). But, without that, the UFT (who is about to use its pension fund -the strongest in the US- to save New York City with a big fat loan) did it up pretty well. 



Update: Solidarity's attempt at an injunction got more press today. These 5 teachers were very brave to put their name on a lawsuit. And Lydia, who raised the funds and worked with Bryan Glass developing the petition has done yeoman's work there.  To date, no caucus has chosen to work with Solidarity on this and one, MORE, actually turned down Solidarity's invitation to work on and file an injunction as joint entities. I'm not sure what more proof you need that all union caucus' are terrible, but if you do need more proof, I'd be happy to break it down in painful detail.  




10 comments:

  1. Serious? Weren't you the girl who was on them just last week? Make up your mind.

    Also what do you know about the buyout?

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    1. Ok ok. Fair enough point. It's really frustrating to get all worked up for a strike, then watch my union leaders let a Twitter troll (sorry! NYTimes Education Reporter) talk smack about them. They should let them do that. Also let's not forget .. YES they are MUCH more responsive but they still sit in the same ivory towers at the Tweed folks. That wasn't a game for people who were getting ready to go on a strike. And besides what I wrote wasn't all that bad.

      There is nothing .. NOTHING .. new in Albany that is published. It looks to me like whatever they have worked out will be published when they are good are ready. So, I guess, stay tuned (After my buyout series last Spring, I imagine I would be the dead last to know about it 😃😃)

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  2. Do you think a buyout /retirement incentive is something that will be offered ? Any guess on a time line ?

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    1. My glances into the future are as good as anyone's but my guess is that the city is in a dire financial situation and that a buyout of some sort is pretty much gonna happen.

      Now I have to say, the city really wants that federal money (bc it's free) amd so they'll hold out for as long as possible. But the only union whose pension fund is independnant and strong emough to loan the city the money they need is the UFTs. So I don't aee how an early retirement incentive WON'T happen.

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  3. I'm confused as to how you can say that Unity has not sold out membership. It now appears quite clear that the intention, since the late spring, was to back the mayor's plan for re-opening, although this was clearly not in the interests of members. At this point the union's behavior and its PR as indistinguishable from that of City Hall. The agendas are one and the same: opening schools, suppressing resistance, denying problems, singing a happy tune to drown out member's cries for help or remediation.

    It is simply not a tenable argument that they were 'unable' to get all-remote done in NYC for allegedly NYC-specific reasons when they never even took that position in the first place. And don't get me started on the 10 day delay, that supposed scrap of a "win," which resulted in teachers being sent right into un-safety certified buildings in order to give BdB/DOE 10 more days to desperately scramble to find teachers, nurses, PPE, etc, thereby averting the immediate threat of a humiliating fail (had students shown up on 9/8, that is). Even that was a sellout, if you peek a millimeter under the surface.

    Right now, and for the last several months, the union has worked on behalf of management and against its own workers. For God's sake, even the safety checks are a crock, as far as I'm concerned; the fact is that you can walk into any school building tomorrow with a 102 degree fever, flash some stupid four question checklist on your phone, and waltz right in. Hairdressers are safer.

    Bottom line: this failure goes well beyond ivory-towerism, simply cravenness, or inept, shit leadership. It was intentional from the start and it's hurting the workers whose wellbeing is the union's only reason to exist. Where I'm from, we call that treason, pure and simple.

    ReplyDelete
  4. I'm confused as to how you can say that Unity has not sold out membership. It now appears quite clear that the intention, since the late spring, was to back the mayor's plan for re-opening, although this was clearly not in the interests of members. At this point the union's behavior and its PR as indistinguishable from that of City Hall. The agendas are one and the same: opening schools, suppressing resistance, denying problems, singing a happy tune to drown out member's cries for help or remediation.

    It is simply not a tenable argument that they were 'unable' to get all-remote done in NYC for allegedly NYC-specific reasons when they never even took that position in the first place. And don't get me started on the 10 day delay, that supposed scrap of a "win," which resulted in teachers being sent right into un-safety certified buildings in order to give BdB/DOE 10 more days to desperately scramble to find teachers, nurses, PPE, etc, thereby averting the immediate threat of a humiliating fail (had students shown up on 9/8, that is). Even that was a sellout, if you peek a millimeter under the surface.

    Right now, and for the last several months, the union has worked on behalf of management and against its own workers. For God's sake, even the safety checks are a crock, as far as I'm concerned; the fact is that you can walk into any school building tomorrow with a 102 degree fever, flash some stupid four question checklist on your phone, and waltz right in. Hairdressers are safer.

    Bottom line: this failure goes well beyond ivory-towerism, simply cravenness, or inept, shit leadership. It was intentional from the start and it's hurting the workers whose wellbeing is the union's only reason to exist. Where I'm from, we call that treason, pure and simple.

    ReplyDelete
  5. I'm confused as to how you can say that Unity has not sold out membership. It now appears quite clear that the intention, since the late spring, was to back the mayor's plan for re-opening, although this was clearly not in the interests of members. At this point the union's behavior and its PR as indistinguishable from that of City Hall. The agendas are one and the same: opening schools, suppressing resistance, denying problems, singing a happy tune to drown out member's cries for help or remediation.

    It is simply not a tenable argument that they were 'unable' to get all-remote done in NYC for allegedly NYC-specific reasons when they never even took that position in the first place. And don't get me started on the 10 day delay, that supposed scrap of a "win," which resulted in teachers being sent right into un-safety certified buildings in order to give BdB/DOE 10 more days to desperately scramble to find teachers, nurses, PPE, etc, thereby averting the immediate threat of a humiliating fail (had students shown up on 9/8, that is). Even that was a sellout, if you peek a millimeter under the surface.

    Right now, and for the last several months, the union has worked on behalf of management and against its own workers. For God's sake, even the safety checks are a crock, as far as I'm concerned; the fact is that you can walk into any school building tomorrow with a 102 degree fever, flash some stupid four question checklist on your phone, and waltz right in. Hairdressers are safer.

    Bottom line: this failure goes well beyond ivory-towerism, simply cravenness, or inept, shit leadership. It was intentional from the start and it's hurting the workers whose wellbeing is the union's only reason to exist. Where I'm from, we call that treason, pure and simple.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I hear you. Hard disagree though.
      Super at risk people are free to get a medical. There are other paths to staying in. We do, at some point,have to consider normal. I realize this sounds foreign in an environment with no leadership but we do.

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  6. How do we apply for the 2/3 childcare accommodation?

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    1. I don't really know! Call the UFT office for your borough. They will.
      Good luck!

      Delete