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Reject the concessions sellout! Mobilize Detroit workers behind
the teachers!
Statement of the Socialist Equality Party
13 September 2006
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The following statement is available to download in PDF format to distribute to the meeting
of Detroit teachers scheduled for Wednesday morning in Detroit.
Striking Detroit teachers should vote no on the
sellout contract reached Tuesday between School Superintendent
William Coleman and the Detroit Federation of Teachers (DFT).
The few details of the agreement that have been reported make
clear that the contract represents a betrayal of the teachers
demands and a cave-in to the drive by the school board, the city,
the state and the corporate elite whom they serve to slash teachers
living standards and continue their assault on public education
in Detroit.
According to local TV news reports, the three-year contract
calls for a wage freeze in year one, a 1 percent increase in the
second year, and a 2.5 percent increase in year three. These are
derisory increases, coming on the heels of years of wage freezes
and givebacks. They mean a further cut in teachers wages,
after inflation, of 10 percent or more over the course of the
contract.
This is only the beginning. The contract also includes a 10
percent co-pay on health benefits for all teachersa provision
that will further shrink the income of educators who already have
to struggle to make ends meet.
There are undoubtedly other concessionary provisions that add
up to cost savings extracted on the backs of the teachers close
to the original $90 million demanded by Coleman and the school
board.
Make no mistake: acceptance of this sellout will open the way
for even further attacks on both teachers and students. This is
not what teachers have been fighting for. They have remained solid
and determined in the face of a vicious media assault, a strike-breaking
court injunction, and two-faced Democratic politicians such as
Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick and Governor Jennifer Granholm who pose
as friends of labor while working with the corrupt
elite represented by the $225,000-a-year administrator Coleman
to break the strike and impose the crisis of their own creation
on the backs of the teachers and the rest of the working class.
It has been clear from day one of the strike that the overwhelming
majority of Detroiters support the teachers. Now that support
must be transformed into a powerful mobilization to defend the
teachers against the inevitable attacks that will be launched
against them should they reject the contract and remain on strike.
What arguments can teachers expect to hear from Garrison in
favor of a return to work? First, the threatwhich is realof
fines and even arrests under the state law banning public employee
strikes. This, however, is an argument for doing what she and
the rest of the union leadership in Detroit have refused to do:
turning out to the rest of the working class and fighting for
mass pickets, mass demonstrations and sympathy strike action against
any attempt to penalize the teachers for fighting for their rights.
Second, that there is no money and the contract
she has signed onto is the best that can be achieved. Both contentions
are lies.
The financial state of the school district and the city is
not the responsibility of teachers. How the powers-that-be come
up with the funds needed to fulfill their responsibility to provide
decent salaries and decent schools is not the concern of the teachers.
The money, in any event, is there. The problem is that financial
resources are being diverted into the bank accounts of the elite
who were represented on the podium of Tuesdays press conference:
overpaid officials like Coleman, civil rights careerists
like Detroit NAACP head Wendell Anthony, and big business politicians
like Kilpatrick and Granholm.
Any objective examination of the financial records of the city
and the school district would reveal millions of dollars squandered
in exorbitant salaries and expense accounts, payoffs and sweetheart
contracts for business cronies, and similar corrupt practices.
Then there is the looting of resources to pay for corporate tax
breaks and the diversion of funds for charter schools.
Billions of dollars are generated to bankroll the casino interests
and subsidize the building of sports stadiums and high-rent condos,
but no money can be found to provide modern and clean school buildings,
books, lab equipment and computers, and to hire enough teachers
at decent wages to reduce class sizes.
The real issue is the priorities of a political and social
system that subordinates the social needs of the vast majoritythe
working classto the further enrichment of a financial oligarchy.
The burning issue posed directly by the strike is the need
for working people to break free of the two parties of big business
and build their own, independent political movement to oppose
the entire avaricious elite that is destroying their living standards
and attacking their democratic rights. It must be a movement that
rejects the existing economic setup and its backward priorities
and advances a socialist alternativebased on human need
instead of corporate profit and committed to the principle of
genuine democracy and social equality.
The major obstacle in the way of conducting such a struggle
is the trade union bureaucracy. The Detroit unionsthe DFT,
the AFL-CIO, the United Auto Workers, the Teamsters, the AFSCME
city unionshave deliberately isolated the teachers and left
them to face the threat of government sanctions on their own.
This is no wonder, since they are allied to the very party, the
Democratic Party, which has for decades bled the citys working
class population and is overseeing the current attack on the teachers,
and are even now campaigning for Granholms reelection.
If Garrison is not prepared to fight the assault on the teachers,
then she should pack up her briefcase and make way for those who
are. Teachers should elect a rank-and-file committee to take charge
of the negotiations and launch a campaign to mobilize the working
class of Detroit behind the strike.
Political demands should be raised, including:
1. Fire Superintendent Coleman and the overpaid education
directors under him. Establish a committee of educators,
school employees and residents to scrupulously examine the districts
finances, instead of the fact-finding whitewash proposed
by Governor Granholm. This committee should exercise democratic
control of the schools and allocate resources to meet the needs
of students, not politically connected businessmen.
2. Recall all the advocates of privatization and charter schools
from the school board. Halt all funding of charter and for-profit
schools.
3. Equip every school with the textbooks, supplies and technology
needed for effective education. Tear down dilapidated buildings
and construct new school facilities. Hire more teachers to guarantee
smaller class sizes.
4. Expand the curriculum to include a wide range of options
for students, including foreign languages, social science and
the arts. Demand that No Child Left Behind be scrapped
in favor of the rational utilization of the latest developments
in learning theory and teaching methodology to raise the cultural
level of Detroits youth.
These measures require a vast expansion of resources. Tax windfalls
for big business must be ended and the tax structure revamped
to lessen the burden on workers and middle-class people and increase
the share paid by the rich. Make the rebuilding of Detroits
public school system a top priority by redirecting tax revenues
toward education.
The auto industry, which to no small extent determines the
fate of Detroit, can no longer be the personal property of a handful
of corporate CEOs and billionaire investors. It must be transformed
into a democratically controlled public enterprise so that the
wealth created by working people can be used to meet societys
needs, including it most important obligation: providing a high
quality education to its youth.
This is the policy advanced by the Socialist Equality Party.
SEP Public Meeting
Political Issues in the Detroit Teachers Strike
Thursday, September 14, 7 p.m.
Northwest Activities Center, Ballroom
18100 Meyers, Detroit
See Also:
Defend the teachers! Mobilize Detroit
workers against strike-breaking! Billions for public education!
[12 September 2006]
Detroit teachers defy injunction, but
Democrats prepare new trap for strike
[11 September 2006]
Answer strike-breaking injunction: Mobilize
Detroit workers in defense of the teachers
[9 September 2006]
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