Archive Page 7

Back to School Heat Wave: How Should UFT Respond?

Heat surged to record levels yesterday, just as New York City’s students reported for the first day of public school. In a functioning City, schools would effectively also be cooling centers. Students could escape the heat, learning new content under the comfort of reasonable temperatures. But, for too many students and teachers, that’s not what happened yesterday. Instead, thousands of students reportedly returned to classrooms without functioning air conditioning units.

When I did some digging on the UFT website on how to respond to air conditioning issues, I found this document. Perhaps the most absurd section is this excerpted passage below, which makes bizarre use of capitalization to emphasize that the UFT doesn’t have any power to act.

NYSUT is supporting a bill that would mandate that classrooms be no hotter than 88 degrees and no colder than 60 degrees. 88 degrees still sounds a bit high to me, but this at least would give us something. Now, when NYSUT supports something, UFT generally does too. But, surprisingly, UFT leadership has been silent in official communications with members. Those of us in the schools can easily see the problem, so is it just that air conditioning is working just fine in the centrally cooled offices at 52 Broadway or is something else going on?

My guess is that this is one of those situations where UFT leadership is choosing to stay quiet, hoping members will forget about the problem when the heat wave inevitably dies down later this Fall. After all, the temperature issues are difficult to solve. Many of NYC’s buildings were built before the age of ACs and likely need significant retrofitting to allow air conditioners to work in every single room at once. Many schools also have old ACs that need to be replaced. Both things are hard to do in a City whose mayor is reducing funding of schools. And when the City says no, we know all too well how UFT leadership responds.

In the wake of of the City’s failure to prepare for heat-wave issues, and in the wake of UFT leadership’s lack of communications to members, rank-and-file educators are once again returning to ‘wildcat’ strategies. The UFT could have sent out a survey to schools, but they didn’t, so members created their own version in collaboration with parent leaders on the PEP. When our union isn’t doing the work, or is working against our interests (as with healthcare), this is often all we can do – just as retirees had to form their own grassroots union-style organizations to fight the City and their own unions against the imposition of an inferior Medicare Advantage plan.

Retirees won (so far), and we can too. But we’d all be much happier, I think, if our union fought the right fights in the first place.

-Nick Bacon, UFT Executive Board and Co-Chair of New Action Caucus.

A Farewell to Collective Bargaining?

Over the last several years, UFT leadership has claimed repeatedly to be in an existential fight for our very right to collectively bargain. Infamously, they’ve made the absurd claim—over and over again—that pushing retirees onto Medicare Advantage isn’t about saving money at the expense of our most vulnerable members. Rather, they’ve suggested, Medicare Advantage is about our ‘collective bargaining’ rights. To Mulgrew and company, any judicial decision or piece of legislation that keeps the City/MLC from throwing retirees off their healthcare somehow diminishes the union’s negotiating power. What UFT leadership doesn’t say in their communications to members is that, for them ‘collective bargaining’ on healthcare primarily consists of promising away billions of dollars of funding and managing our losses by robbing Peter (in this case, retirees) to pay Paul (in-service members, who by the way, will probably soon be Peter). For UFT leadership, that beats actually organizing—which is precisely what they would need to do in order to preserve existing healthcare coverage for both in-service and retired members. That, of course, is unacceptable, especially since in some models doing the right thing on healthcare might mean losing valuable Unity patronage jobs.

But, since collectively bargaining away our healthcare is so important to UFT leadership, there’s a certain irony to yesterday’s AAA certification of the OT/PT revote. While in most circles a ‘yes vote’ would be a positive thing, in this case it’s not so simple. As readers know, the contract that just passed is a carbon copy of a deal that was voted down by a 2/3 margin earlier this summer. When our UFT President communicated to membership that he wouldn’t be able to do the job of collectively ‘re-bargaining’ in a timely manner, Unity orchestrated a divisive and undemocratic re-vote campaign to avoid going back to the negotiating table.  

But why would UFT leadership—who would rather throw retirees to the wolves than give up a chance to collectively bargain—forego their right to negotiate with management? Why would they instead ask membership to simply take the first deal the City threw at them?

The truth is that the UFT hasn’t seriously engaged in ‘collective bargaining’ for decades. Instead, they’ve engaged in ‘concessionary bargaining,’ accepting the bulk of what our employer demands, including a decline in real wages, reduced healthcare spending (for the City, not us), and changes in working conditions that have predominately favored management rather than labor. When workers, like the OT/PTs, have had the audacity to ask for more—for true collective bargaining—the UFT has responded by disorganizing them into acquiescence.

So, as MLC/UFT leadership pretends that we are on the verge of losing ‘collective bargaining’ rights because of a bill that would preserve retiree healthcare coverage, let’s call their bluff. They bid farewell to collective bargaining in the interests of membership long, long ago. What UFT leadership is fighting for is the right to concede.

Nick Bacon is a co-chair of New Action Caucus (NAC) and a member of the UFT Executive Board

As a Bus Strike Looms – How Should the UFT Respond?

On August 28th 2023, Chancellor David Banks emailed tens of thousands of vacationing UFT members about “potential disruptions” to school bus service at the beginning of the coming school year. The potential disruptions stem from a possible strike from the Amalgamated Transit Union Local 1181 against the bus companies that employ them. Chancellor Banks touts contingency plans being prepared by NYC Public Schools to minimize disruptions, without offering specifics or outlining expectations for unionized staff including members of the UFT, CSA, and DC37. We also have not yet heard from the UFT regarding how we plan to respond to a striking union within our school system. 

While we are currently dealing in the hypothetical, why have we not heard from the major unions involved? What are our responsibilities to a striking union as members of unions ourselves? We must be careful not to veer into the territory of crossing a picket line when a strike impacts our own work sites. Recently, the United Teachers of Los Angeles struck in solidarity with the Local 99 chapter of the Service Employees International Union. In fairness, this is not entirely analogous to our situation. New York State’s Taylor Law is incredibly punitive towards striking public sector unions. ATU Local 1181 is not a public sector union, nor is it as directly connected as the Los Angeles unions. Yet, that does not mean we have no responsibilities to our bus drivers. We know how hard they work and the importance of their labor in safely transporting our students, often through difficult streets and before the sun rises, for little compensation. Their grievances are real and they deserve our solidarity. 

So how cooperative should unionized staff be, and how can we stand in solidarity with ATU Local 1181 while respecting our contractual duties and maintaining the safety of our students? Where is the line between our duties as educators and our duties as unionists?

This summer, we witnessed members of both the AFT and UFT join the picket lines in solidarity with SAG-AFTRA and the WGA. Solidarity is a hallmark of the American labor movement and something all unions rely on when they are forced by the employer to undergo a strike. We have shown solidarity with SAG-AFTRA and the WGA, as we should. But those strikes are easy for us to support, as they don’t directly impact our own labor. How can we show solidarity with ATU Local 1181 should they require it of us? What are the plans, and how can we act should there be a bus driver strike this school year? We remain hopeful that we will hear from the concerned unions soon. 

UFT leadership, we’re waiting.

-Submitted by a concerned New Action member


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