Sunday, December 28, 2014

Teachers’ unions have become the single biggest impediment to school reform

David Brooks nails it in his NYT op ed today: "Teachers' unions have become the single biggest impediment to school reform." (www.nytimes.com/2014/12/19/opinion/david-brooks-the-union-future.html)
Over the past decades, the case for enhancing union power has grown both stronger and weaker. On the one hand, as wages have stagnated while profits have soared, it does seem that there is something out of whack in the balance of power between labor and capital. Workers need some new way to collectively bargain for more money.
On the other hand, unions, and especially public-sector unions, have done a lot over the past decades to rigidify workplaces, especially government. Teachers' unions have become the single biggest impediment to school reform. Police unions have become an impediment to police reform.
If you look at all the proposals that have been discussed since the cases of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Mo., and Eric Garner in New York, you find that somewhere or other around the country, police unions have opposed all of them:

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