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Detroit teachers vote narrowly to end strike
By Joe Kay and Lawrence Porter
14 September 2006
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In a close vote, Detroit teachers on Wednesday voted to end
their 16-day strike and return to work on the basis of their previous
contract, pending a mail ballot on a tentative contract approved
by the Detroit Federation of Teachers (DFT) the day before. The
new contract includes an estimated $60 million in concessions.
The struggle of the teachers was undone by the DFT leadership
and the rest of the Detroit trade union bureaucracy, which did
nothing to mobilize the broad popular support for the teachers
and instead isolated the strike, leaving the teachers to face
the threat of fines and other reprisals on their own. The teachers
had defied a court injunction issued the previous Friday ordering
them to return to work, as well as demands by School Superintendent
William Coleman that a state law banning public employee strikes
be enforced.
Most teachers who streamed into Cobo Hall for the mass meeting
Wednesday morning where union leaders read out provisions of the
tentative deal were angry and bitter over the agreements
derisory wage offer and an across-the-board ten percent co-pay
on health benefits. They had struck to reverse years of wage freezes
and give-backs, school closures and job cuts, and the deterioration
of conditions in the schools. The strike had remained solid despite
a concerted effort by the media to whitewash the school district
and city and state politicians, while blaming the teachers for
causing irreparable harm to the schools.
But in the face of the treachery and cowardice of the DFT leadership,
the vote to end the strike passed by a small margin. Many of the
teachers who opposed the contract felt there was no choice but
to vote to go back to work.
The contract was reached under massive pressure from city and
state Democratic politicians, including Detroit Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick
and Michigan Governor Jennifer Granholm.
At Wednesdays mass meeting the reactionary role of the
union bureaucracy was on full display, as it moved to cut off
discussion and ram through the contract. It was clear the union
leaders felt that a serious, extended discussion would lessen
their ability to obtain a back-to-work vote.
As soon as DFT President Janna Garrison finished reading the
main provisions of the contract, at least 40 teachers lined up
in front of floor microphones. The third teacher to speak praised
the contract and then called for an immediate vote. Garrison tried
to hold a vote, but was met with an uproar from the teachers,
who instead voted to continue the discussion.
After only a few more speakers, however, the same process was
repeated. Another teacher, who had been coached by DFT Director
of Operations Keith Johnson, voiced support for
the agreement and again called for a vote to end the strike.
This time Garrison was able to call the vote, and obtained
a majority of about 60 to 40 for a return to work.
Most of those who were able to speak denounced the contract
for failing to meet any of the teachers demands.
The tentative three-year contract includes an across-the-board
pay freeze for this year, followed by increases of 1 percent and
2.5 percent in the remaining two years. Taking inflation into
account, this will mean a cut in real wages of at least 10 percent.
In addition, all teachers will be required to pay 10 percent
of health care expenses, a provision that will be especially difficult
for teachers with more seniority. Currently, only workers who
began teaching after 1992 are required to pay these costs.
The contract pit different sections of workers against each
other, particularly younger against older workers. It restores
step increasesthe seniority system by which the pay for
younger workers increases the longer they stay in the Detroit
Public School system. The step increases were frozen last year.
Their restoration means that many younger teachers will receive
pay increases mandated by the previous contract once the new agreement
is approved.
The contract will mean a further deterioration of conditions
in the Detroit schools. Press reports on Wednesday indicated that
the school board will meet the remainder of the spending cuts
it is seeking by implementing an across-the-board two percent
budget cut, which will effect such things as maintenance and school
supplies. The school district is also reportedly planning to lay
off more teachers and shut down more schools.
The result of the strike poses very clearly the necessity for
a new leadership and a new political strategy to fight the attacks
on teachers living standards and on the public school system
as a whole. Supporters of the Socialist Equality Party at the
meeting distributed the statement, Reject
the concessions sellout! Mobilize Detroit workers behind the teachers!,
which called for a break with the Democratic and Republican Parties
and the building of a new party, based on a socialist perspective,
to represent the interests of working people.
A reporter from the World Socialist Web Site interviewed
several teachers after the meeting.
Nicole said she was opposed to
the contract. As another gentleman said, over the life of
this contract we will be paying 10 percent for our health costs,
with only a marginal increase in pay, she said. We
will be making less than we made last year.
Nicole also denounced the procedure used by the union to cut
off discussion. We have been fighting to have our voices
heard. And to silence our own voices is idiotic. There was no
hurry. We have been out on strike this long, we should respect
our membership enough to let them raise questions.
Douglas, a math teacher at Hutchins Middle School, said the
contract was a travesty. It doesnt address the real
issues, he said. The system does not care about educating
children. At my school there has been no music program for four
years. There has been no arts program for four years. There are
bullet holes in the stairwell. They have been there for four years.
It is wrong.
We havent had a raise
in three years. Then they say we have the step increases back.
But it is like the Stockholm syndrome. You lock someone up and
take away their freedom, then you give a little bit of freedom
back they are happy and say, Oh, thank you for giving me
that little bit of freedom.
The teachers need to stand up. Now we are going back
to the same status quo. Now we are going back to the same schools,
the same situation, the same dismal failure rate across the city
because no one values children.
Two substitute bilingual teachers said the contract was especially
bad for them. Among other measures dealing specifically with substitute
teachers, the contract eliminates a provision that allowed substitute
teachers to become regular teachers and begin with higher seniority.
Many substitute teachers work full time for years before receiving
a permanent position.
Believe me, without the substitute teachers in my school
the school would fall apart, one teacher said. Another noted
that the financial strains created by the new contract may force
her to leave Detroit for another district. I love my job
and I love my students, but what am I supposed to do? she
asked.
* * *
Public Meeting
The Political Issues in the Detroit Teachers Strike
Thursday, September 14, 7 p.m.
Ballroom, Northwest Activities Center
18100 Meyers
Detroit
See Also:
Reject the concessions sellout! Mobilize
Detroit workers behind the teachers!
[13 September 2006]
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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