Education Roundup: Two largest teachers' unions considering merging
Wisconsin News-- Wisconsin’s two largest teachers’ unions will consider merging, and doing more to help members address concerns in their local school districts.
Wisconsin’s two largest teachers’ unions will consider merging, and doing more to help members address concerns in their local school districts. The Wisconsin Education Association Council’s representative assembly approved merger talks over the weekend, after the state’s chapter of the American Federation of Teachers did the same. Membership in both groups plunged by 30-percent since the 2011 law which virtually eliminated collective bargaining by most public unions. That’s because union dues are no longer mandatory. WEAC president Mary Bell says her group has had a relationship with A-F-T for decades, and it’s more useful for the two to work together and present a united front. WEAC director Dan Burkhalter told the Wisconsin State Journal that its business model has been quote, “busted up.” He said the union was geared mainly toward collective bargaining – and spending big money to campaign for public officials who would preserve those privileges. Members said the new focus is to make local unions as powerful as possible. Just before the bargaining law passed, many school districts extended their previous contracts – but they generally expired in June. Some schools, like Madison, scrambled to approve new contracts in September after a Dane County struck down the collective bargaining limits for schools and local governments. The state is appealing that decision.
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State Assembly Republican Don Pridemore of Hartford is expected to announce his candidacy for state school superintendent today. Pridemore will travel around the state for a kick-off announcement in Madison, Milwaukee, Green Bay, Wausau, and Eau Claire. He registered as a candidate with state officials last week, but he had not totally decided to run at that point. The 66-year-old Pridemore is the first to challenge incumbent school Superintendent Tony Evers. Pridemore will start his fifth term in the Assembly in January. He would not have to give up his seat if he loses to Evers. The two are on opposite sides of the law which virtually eliminated collective bargaining for teachers and most other public employee unions. Pridemore helped pass that measure in 2011. He also said last week that a fresh set of educational ideas is needed because quote, “We have not moved the needle one bit.”
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