The Riehl World: Unions Not A Carlsbad Problem

by Richard J. Riehl on February 24, 2011

Labor unions have been credited with the rise of America’s middle class. In the 1950’s about 40 percent of the nation’s workforce were union members. Today that number has dropped to less than 7 percent of private sector workers and about a third of public employees. Economists now warn of a disappearing middle class and the income gap between labor and management employees has widened.

In the five years from 2002 to 2007, 65 percent of all income growth in the U.S. went to the wealthiest 1 percent of the population, according to researchers at UC Berkeley and the Paris School of Economics.

Politicians have jumped on the bandwagon of union bashing for ruining state and local economies. Carlsbad’s new mayor built his successful campaign on a promise to prevent a union takeover on the council that would threaten the city’s future prosperity.

Follow the jump for the rest of the story.
Labor unions have been credited with the rise of America’s middle class. In the 1950’s about 40 percent of the nation’s workforce were union members. Today that number has dropped to less than 7 percent of private sector workers and about a third of public employees. Economists now warn of a disappearing middle class and the income gap between labor and management employees has widened.

In the five years from 2002 to 2007, 65 percent of all income growth in the U.S. went to the wealthiest 1 percent of the population, according to researchers at UC Berkeley and the Paris School of Economics.

Politicians have jumped on the bandwagon of union bashing for ruining state and local economies. Carlsbad’s new mayor built his successful campaign on a promise to prevent a union takeover on the council that would threaten the city’s future prosperity.

The steady drumbeat of criticism leveled at public employee unions has become both tiresome and troubling. Tiresome because of the mindless clichés: public worker jobs are “cushy,” their paychecks “fat,” their pensions “bloated,” and their bonuses “hefty.” Teachers are said to be greedy and self-serving, caring more about their own job security, pay and benefits than student learning. It’s troubling because the overblown rhetoric makes it harder for people of goodwill to work together on common problems.

We can’t blame unions for the greed, stupidity and shortsightedness that led to our financial woes. Mortgage industry executives, government regulators, and our elected leaders had the power to prevent the meltdown.

Comparing North County city budgets and school test scores, it’s hard to understand why unions get such a bad rap.

Carlsbad prospers, while Oceanside, Vista and Escondido face cuts to public services. All have strong public employee unions that are now under assault by city officials, either for threatening future prosperity, in Carlsbad’s case, or for not bailing out the budgets of the other three. If unions are the problem, you have to wonder why Carlsbad has been left unscathed.

While several schools in Vista and Escondido are threatened with state sanctions because of low test scores, Carlsbad, San Dieguito and Poway schools face none. If unions are spreading an epidemic of failing schools, why are some schools immune?

Unions are blamed for denying administrators the right to lay off teachers based on merit rather than seniority. Good teaching is assumed to be easily recognized, and that experience cannot be trusted as a reliable measure.

Teaching success, like student learning, can be assessed in multiple ways. It’s not possible to rank teachers precisely on their effectiveness. When budget shortfalls require layoffs, administrators could take into account the cost of retaining experienced, highly paid teachers, regardless of their effectiveness. Speaking from personal experience, I know I was a far better teacher in my fifth year than my first.

My beef with administrators arises when they hire and award tenure to ineffective teachers, removing students from their classrooms when parents complain. That’s an administrative failure, not a matter of union obstruction.

I’ve never been a union member, but having worked with unions as a state university administrator I learned that complaints about their obstructiveness was often related to a manager’s failure to treat staff members fairly and openly when making tough personnel decisions.

U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan recently convened a meeting of school officials and union leaders from across the country to consider how management and labor can develop strong partnerships to improve student learning.

That’s a good start. Union bashing hurts us all.

Richard Riehl is a Carlsbad resident. Contact him at fogcutter1@yahoo.com

{ 3 comments… read them below or add one }

Jillian Barclay April 12, 2011 at 6:48 pm

Carlsbad unscathed? Au contraire, Mr. Riehl! Carlsbad is not going unscathed at all. Right now, City Hall is negotiating a new contract with the lowest paid city workers, the employees who belong to the City of Carlsbad Employees Association. The City is highly motivated to impose a contract which may ultimately lead to the very destruction of this little association and the outsourcing of jobs to private contractors. City Hall is claiming a $2.6 or $2.8 million dollar deficit for the upcoming year, in spite of a reserve fund estimated at well over $50 million dollars. It is an attempt to take advantage of public perception. Greedy public sector rmployees, after all, are parasites!
Please see the following article: http://hubpages.com/hub/California-City-Will-Seize-Rights-And-Money-From-Its-Lowest-Paid-Employees-But-Management-Pay-Remains-Bloated

Richard Riehl April 13, 2011 at 9:15 am

Jillian ~
I believe we’re on the same wavelength. The headline suggests Unions have not created the problems our current mayor warns us about. The article points out that unions have been unfairly accused of causing the financial crisis by politicians. Sounds like you didn’t read beyond the headline. But thanks for sending along yours.

Jillian Barclay April 14, 2011 at 1:35 pm

Hi, Richard!
I am really sorry that I left the impression that your article went unread. I did read it and wholeheartedly agree with your conclusions, especially when you point out management’s failure to treat employees fairly and openly.

I agree with you. Matt Hall has stepped on to the bandwagon and is seeking to destroy the Carlsbad Employees Association by drumming up a fake fiscal crisis in Carlsbad. He is capitalizing on the public perception and using that perception to achieve his goals.

And yes, we are on the same wavelength! I hope your readers attend the next couple of City Council meetings, register to speak and let the Mayor and Council know that they are aware of what is going on and that they oppose the power grab…

Sincerely,
Jillian

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