Teacher Vote on Newark Contract Delayed
The teacher vote on the Newark contract has been delayed, likely until Friday. Quite a spirited debate!
On one side of the table was the union firebrand Randi Weingarten, president of the
American Federation of Teachers. On the other was the state
education commissioner handpicked by Gov. Chris Christie, who became a
star among fellow Republicans for aggressively taking on public employee
unions.
During months of intense and late-night
negotiations for a new teachers contract for the chronically troubled
Newark school system, the parties settled on what they believed would be
a landmark compromise.
At the center of it was merit pay — the idea
of paying teachers based on performance that has long been a flash
point between critics of teachers’ unions who believe it would increase
accountability, and union leaders who fear that
performance would be based on test scores rather than the subtleties of
classrooms.
Though Ms. Weingarten had criticized what
she calls “merit pay schemes,” she and the other union leaders agreed to
embrace the concept in exchange for a promise that teachers would have a
rare role in evaluating performance, declaring
it a way to rebuild respect for a $1 billion school system that has bled
students and money to the suburbs and, increasingly, to
charter schools.
Joseph Del Grosso, the leader of the
local union who was jailed for striking 40 years ago, has been
telling his members that approving the contract will turn them into
“heroes.”
But suspicion tends to run high in this New
Jersey city, long rived by politics of race and class. Many teachers
worry that the bonuses will never appear. And a faction has staged an
insurrection against union leaders, saying the
contract will weaken job security and pit teacher against teacher.
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