NJ Teachers SHOULD Give the Private Sector A Try

May God Bless New Jersey Governor Chris Christie.  A virtual unknown a year ago, Christie has set an example for states across the country by standing up to public employee unions – including the sacrosanct teachers’ union!  Now the head of New Jersey Education Association – NJ’s teachers’ union – whines that teachers could do better in the private sector.

"If there’s an invasion of Israel by the Netherlands, he will find a way to blame the NJEA for that," responds the union’s executive director, Vincent Giordano.

In a Fox News interview in the union’s building down the street from the statehouse, Giordano rejected Christie’s attacks, saying they "aren’t warranted."

He says teachers make an average of about $65,000 a year, and "when you put it all together, teacher salaries in New Jersey are still well below the average salary of the private sector. When you include all of the ingredients…I don’t think they are too high or too rich."

GIVE IT A TRY!  See how life is when you CAN be fired for not doing your job.  See how it is when you are compensated for PERFORMANCE rather than just showing up for work more years that someone who actually does a better job.  Enjoy a job where you are grateful if your employer picks up HALF the cost of your healthcare benefits and where you get NO health benefits in retirement.

Christie is right on target!  Americans are finally learning that public employees are actually earning more than their private sector counterparts.  When you throw in benefits and job security, the gap is HUGE!

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NEA – Education First

July 18, 2010 by Cato  
Filed under Culture, Education, National

NEA – the National Education Association – is the nation’s largest union.  Maryland teachers are almost universally members through their local “associations” (union locals).  The NEA claims to be putting our children first.  Why, then, does the NEA sanction an “NEA Drag Queen Caucus”?

I try to be fair.  I don’t believe in discriminating against folk because of their sexual orientation.  But, a DRAG QUEEN CAUCUS?  Does that have any place in our schools?

"They already have had the Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, [and] Transgender Caucus and apparently felt that the drag queens needed their own caucus," explains Finn Laursen, executive director of Christian Educators Association International (CEAI).
"America, I think, needs to respond and to realize what the National Education Association stands for; they’re not hiding it.  It’s appalling to many of our conservative Christian educators who, in their own lives, could not support this kind of thing but find that their dues are being used to support just those kinds of thing," he adds.
Laursen also tells OneNewsNow there was a movement this year to see the NEA’s pro-abortion stance changed to a more neutral position, but that effort failed. "The organization and its delegates were just unwilling to step back and take no position on abortion," he laments. "They’re going to continue their pro-abortion stance."

We can’t have prayer in school, but the NEA thinks that we should have abortions and distribute condoms?

H/T – Anglican Mainstream

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Jakubiak Wants To Sound Conservative

July 7, 2010 by Cato  
Filed under Maryland, Maryland Politics

Maryland Senate Candidate Chris Jakubiak When former Salisbury councilman Mike Dunn is a candidate’s biggest booster voters should be wary.  When a Democrat candidate claims to be fiscally conservative it’s a good bet that voters are being set up for higher taxes AND a big spending increase.  When both circumstances merge, voters should run to the nearest polling place and re-elect Maryland Sen. Richard Colburn (R-37).

Chris Jakubiak is a nice guy.  He wants to represent the people of District 37 in the Maryland Senate.  If you read is op-ed in Monday’s Daily Times you would think that this guy has some pretty good ideas.  If you live in District 37, do yourself a favor and dig a little deeper.  Here is Jakubiak’s plan:

  • Spending mandates — public schools, for example — must be tied to revenues. I want pay-as-you-go spending and caps on mandated entitlement spending.
  • Dedicated funds such as for transportation and farms must be protected. When the gas taxes we pay are diverted from roads to the general fund, our trust is shaken. It is actually worse; rather than funding needed projects with revenues raised for that purpose, the state issues bonds and increases debt.
  • Read more

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    How Big A Sham is Obama’s “Race to the Top”?

    April 4, 2010 by Cato  
    Filed under Education, National, National Politics

    We all know that the federal government really has no business meddling in education.  Yet, when we listen to President Obama’s rhetoric regarding his “Race to the Top” program, it all sounds so wonderful:

    • More charter schools.
    • More accountability for TEACHERS and schools.

    Yet, here is what is actually happening:

    It’s not the federal government’s job to set state and local education policy, but if it’s going to do so, it should at least put its muscle to good use. Initially, it appeared that this was what the Obama administration was doing with Race to the Top: In the scramble for federal funds, education secretary Arne Duncan promised, states that capped the number of charter schools would be at a disadvantage, and states that banned the use of student test-score progress in teacher evaluations wouldn’t even be eligible. But the finalists for the first round of funding have been announced, and results aren’t promising: New York, which both caps charter schools and bans the use of student test-score data in tenure decisions, is on the list; so is Kentucky, which doesn’t allow charter schools at all. Meanwhile, the process has been shrouded in secrecy: Neither the judges’ names nor the states’ actual scores on the 500-point scale will be released for another month. We’re awaiting announcement of the winners, but so far, Race to the Top is stumbling out of the gates.

    How big a sham is “Race to the Top”?

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    Open Union Negotiations at the WCBOE

    March 27, 2010 by Cato  
    Filed under Education, Maryland, Wicomico Politics

    The Wicomico County Board of Education (WCBOE) doesn’t have a great record of inspiring taxpayer confidence when it comes to spending.  Between doing out benefits like it’s somebody else’s money (because it IS somebody else’s, IT’S OURS) to junkets and expense account lunches, Wicomico taxpayers just aren’t sold that “the children” really come first.  There is one step the WCBOE could take that might help – open union negotiations to the public.

    WAIT!  That’s confidential.  Isn’t it?

    Evidently not.  The Calvert County BOE has opened up their negotiations to the public this year.  Evidently the board and the unions have to agree and waive confidentiality.  If the WCBOE and their four “bargaining units” (educrat for “unions”) don’t have anything to hide, why can’t we sit in on the meetings?

    What about it?  A little fresh air might inspire a little confidence.

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    WCBOE – The Big Field Trip (Part II)

    On Wednesday, we looked at the Wicomico County Board of Education’s (WCBOE) attempts to hide information from the public regarding use (and abuse) of taxpayer dollars for travel and entertainment.  We also caught a glimpse at WCBOE to junkets to Disneyland, Disney World, Las Vegas; as well as trips by superintendent John Fredericksen and WCBOE board member Mark Thompson to sunny California.

    Yesterday, we saw a disturbing pattern.  If you are a WCBOE educrat, why sit through boring meetings at the central office when the taxpayer will foot the bill for a nice meal.  Why worry that teachers can’t get needed supplies for their classroom (without dipping into their own pocket) when it’s FAR MORE IMPORTANT to eat out, IN SALISBURY, on the taxpayers’ dime.

    Today, we’re going to look at at something that upsets me more than all of these other things put together.  While costing the citizens of Wicomico County very little, I was dismayed to see that WCBOE employees have so little regard for the taxpayers that they don’t think twice about leaving large tips when they pick up sandwiches, doughnuts, etc. for various meetings.

    WHY NOT?  IT’S ONLY THE TAXPAYERS’ MONEY!

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    WCBOE – The Big Field Trip (Part II)

    In an era when teachers are being forced to pay for school supplies out of their own pockets, why does Wicomico County Board of Education superintendent John Fredericksen seem to think that the taxpayers should foot the bill for taking county executive Rick Pollitt out to lunch?  How about county parks director Gary Mackes?

    It ain’t the $20 John.  It’s the principle of the thing.  This isn’t your money.  To be fair, I don’t know that either Pollitt or Mackes knew that their lunches with Fredericksen were on the taxpayers’ dime.  Maybe they did, maybe they didn’t.  One thing is certain.  The next time any elected official or county employee has a “meeting” with Fredericksen, they would be wise to brown bag it.

    DOES ANYONE PAY FOR THEIR OWN MEALS AT THE WCBOE?

    Admittedly, the question may be a bit over the top.  However, you do begin to wonder when you look at a very small sample of the WCBOE’s “travel” expenses.  An awful lot of receipts are generated for meals IN SALISBURY.

    The whole board, along with Fredericksen, has dinner and charges it to us.  To be fair, I don’t begrudge them a free meal.  One or two of the board members actually work hard (maybe only one now that Sue Hitch has left the board).  They don’t get paid very much for an admittedly thankless job.  HOWEVER, these people are responsible for spending half of the county’s budget.  Their meetings are supposed to be public.  While it would be unfair for me to accuse them of wrongdoing, it still shouldn’t happen.  When the Wicomico County Council takes their 15 or 20 minute lunch break, the door is always open and they don’t seem to mind when people walk in and out.

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    WCBOE – The Big Field Trip (Part I)

    March 17, 2010 by Cato  
    Filed under Education, Fiscal Policy, Maryland, Wicomico Politics

    Wicomico County Board of Education Junkets to Disneyland.  Junkets to Las Vegas.  Junkets to DisneyWorld.  These are just a few instances of where Wicomico tax dollars go thanks to our infamous Board of Education (WCBOE).

    Oddly enough, I don’t believe that junkets such as these are the worst examples of the WCBOE’s travel / entertainment profligacy.  I don’t doubt that many of these trips afford some marginal benefit to our public schools.  Some may even be necessary.  Some examples, such as employees going to Hooters on the taxpayers dime are actually amusing.

    No.  What frustrates me most is the attitude shown by superintendent John Fredericksen and his merry little band of bureaucrats towards the taxpayers of Wicomico County that I find most disturbing.  To Fredericksen, et al, we are a giant cash register; nothing more.

    Eating out at Ruth’s Chris Steakhouse.  Fredericksen going out to lunch with county parks director Gary Mackes or county executive Rick Pollitt and then charging it to the taxpayer.  The response is that this is allowed in the private sector.  This is true.  However, the private sector does not take funds from citizens by force.  Those same people in the private sector don’t have lifetime job security or a retirement package like WCBOE employees.

    HIDE THE EXPENSE ACCOUNT

    John Fredericksen What is even more despicable is Fredericksen’s belief that he can hide this information from the public.  Last summer, Wicomico County councilman Joe Holloway requested information on the WCBOE’s travel expenses for the last two years.  Here is Fredericksen’s response.

    Note that Fredericksen (in his most obtuse bureaucratic lingo) says that he would love to comply, BUT, before he could “assist our County counterparts”, Fredericksen must explain that it’s going to cost a small fortune to provide the information to Holloway.

    Now, that might be a valid concern – EXCEPT …  Fredericksen wasn’t being exactly truthful with Joe Holloway.  Holloway is tighter with the taxpayers’ money than he is his own (and Joe can pinch a penny).  So, after receiving Fredericksen’s response he didn’t push the matter any further.  Until … at a council meeting in the Fall of 2009 the usual suspects from the WCBOE showed up for a budget transfer.  WCBOE comptroller Bruce Ford had a printout of some expense categories.  Holloway asked Ford how difficult it was to get that information.  Ford replied that all you had to do was enter the account code(s) and the time period and VOILA!

    Read more

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    Why Does the WCBOE Protect Criminals?

    March 16, 2010 by Cato  
    Filed under Crime, Education, Maryland, Wicomico Politics

    Fraud Harken back to the days of the great landfill scandal.  After Sheriff Mike Lewis caught the criminals and States Attorney Davis Ruark sent them to jail it was discovered that the miscreants would be collecting full county pensions.  Shame on us.

    By law, nothing could be done about the problem at hand.  However, Wicomico’s county council did take steps to make sure that such an event wouldn’t occur in the future.  If a county employee was found guilty of defrauding or otherwise stealing from the taxpayers they would forfeit the county’s contribution to their pension.

    Last year it was discovered that a Wicomico County Board of Education (WCBOE) employee was defrauding the taxpayers (or if you are a lefty – “stealing form the children”).  I’m sure it wasn’t the first time; nor the last.  Assuming that this woman is convicted and sentence to jail, she will be eligible to receive her full pension.  Shame on us again?

    WCBOE - It's For the Children Maybe.  The WCBOE bureaucrats read the paper.  Hell, thanks to their “special relationship” they practically run it.  But, I’m willing to give them the benefit of the doubt as to why they didn’t pass a resolution similar to the county’s soon after the county passed their new pension rules.  However, in early December of last year the Wicomico County Council sent a letter to superintendent John Fredericksen asking that they adopt a similar resolution.  Almost four months have passed.  NOTHING.

    If the WCBOE doesn’t act, then the next time an employee is discovered stealing from the taxpayer, the fault will lie squarely on Fredericksen and the board.  Perhaps Fredericksen, et al, will argue that their collective bargaining agreements wouldn’t allow them to pass such legislation.  But wait, I thought that it was all “FOR THE CHILDREN”.

    Tomorrow – Part I of The Big Field Trip, our expose of waste, fraud, and abuse in the WCBOE Travel Budget

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    Fredericksen Needs A Little Economics Lesson

    March 15, 2010 by Cato  
    Filed under Education, Fiscal Policy, Maryland, Wicomico Politics

    It’s pretty obvious from yesterday’s Daily Times op-ed that Wicomico County schools superintendent John Fredericksen never bothered taking an economics class during his many years of post-secondary education.  Fredericksen seems to be under the delusion that the Wicomico County Board of Education (WCBOE) is somehow an “economic engine” that grows our local economy:

    The Wicomico County school system is one of the region’s top three employers, an economic engine with 25 schools and more than 2,500 employees. Our employees support the Wicomico County economy and the communities where they live, magnifying the effect of dollars that are spent on public education.

    While I certainly don’t expect Fredericksen to grasp Adam Smith’s Wealth of Nations, he should at least take the time to tackle Henry Hazlitt’s Economics in One Lesson.  Government spending CANNOT CREATE WEALTH.  Wealth creation is what grows an economy over the long term.

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