You just have to love it when government uses taxpayer resources to convince taxpayers to cough up more. It takes an unusually large set of brass ones to do such a thing.
But that’s apparently how they roll in the Western School District, near Battle Creek, Michigan.
Apparently unaware for the past dozen years that technology can play a role in improving education, school officials want to raise taxes (about $180 annually for a $100,000 home) to pay for technology upgrades.
The school district has blurred ethical lines in order to accomplish its mission.
The “Vote Yes!” campaign posted a picture on Facebook of what appear to be elementary students standing in campaign t-shirts giving the thumbs up. It had the caption, “These future WHS Panther wrestlers hope you support the bond proposal and vote ‘YES’ on February 28th.”
Source: Western Schools Bond Facebook page
[Here is a screen grab of the Facebook page, should it “conveniently” disappear.]
Tags: indoctrination, Michigan, Tax Increase, Western School District Posted Feb 2nd 2012 at 4:13 am in Education, Local Government |
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How much bailing out does one company need? After receiving some $50 billion in tax dollars from us courtesy of Obama’s “cash stash,” GM is claiming success with a “big profit” with last year’s third quarter report, and in his recent State of the Union Speech, President Obama claimed that GM was “back on top as the world’s number one automaker.” But true or not, if all is coming up roses for GM, why is the company now lobbying the individual states for mini bailouts?
“We are increasing our activity with the states obviously, in the communities in which we operate. In doing this, we’ve invested more than $6 billion (throughout the states) during the last five years and brought 15,000 people back to work. So, the activity at the state level is important to us. Our lobbying is comparable to what our competitors are doing throughout the states,” said GM spokesman Greg Martin.
For the Watchdog, Christopher Butler found that GM has received more than $1.5 billion from Michigan, $7.5 million in tax incentives from Kentucky, over $10 million from Texas, and over $2 million from Indiana. Ohio and Maryland have given to the GM bailout fund, too, with tax incentives and other giveaways. (more…)
[MEA President Iris] Salters joined about 1,000 union members protesting at the state Capitol on Tuesday, saying the bill is “again a way to say to labor, you don’t count. It’s a way to say to employees, get back. I believe it’s just like being in the slave days.”
Why such desperate race-baiting against reforms that would modestly limit public union power? MEA bosses, following the example of higher-ups at the National Education Association, extract a tidy living from their members’ pockets.
Michigan occupational averages are from the Bureau of Labor Statistics. MEA staff and officer pay comes from the Department of Labor. While the latest Bureau of Labor Statistics numbers estimate average annual wages in Michigan at $43,280, average pay for MEA staff and officers is $96,373.
GRANT, Mich. – Ever wonder what it costs to quit a labor union?
For one Michigan educator, the annual costs of “non-membership” in the local, state and national teacher unions total $544.28.
But Andrew Buikema, 10-year teacher with Grant Public Schools, is willing to pay the price, just for the privilege of being seen as a true professional, instead of a union worker.
Michigan is not a “right to work” state, which means Buikema’s job is still affected by the district’s contract with the local teachers union, the Grant Education Association. The GEA is affiliated with the Michigan Education Association and the National Education Association.
Buikema has been trying to leave the union since last spring, when he realized that GEA leaders were uninterested in helping the district control costs, even in the face of a multi-million dollar deficit.
By refusing to make wage and benefit concessions, the union contributed to conditions that led to 27 teachers – including Buikema – receiving layoff notices. The district was also forced into making cuts to student academic and extracurricular programs.
Buikema’s job was saved at the last minute, but he was disgusted by the union’s selfishness.
Tags: Michigan, National Education Association, right-to-work, teacher unions, union dues Posted Jan 18th 2012 at 6:01 am in Big Labor, Education |
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Labor unions are very powerful in Michigan, and the Michigan Education Association may be the strongest of them all.
That explains why the number of charter schools in Michigan has remained capped at a frustrating 150 for nearly two decades.
But that finally changed last week, when Gov. Rick Snydersigned a bill that will increase the cap to 300 charter schools in 2012, 500 in 2014 and eliminate limits altogether starting in 2015. That means school choice is on the march in Michigan, and traditional public schools will face increased pressure to measure up or lose thousands of students and millions of dollars of state funding.
The new law is a major defeat for the MEA and many public school organizations, who bitterly opposed the idea of increased competition.
Tags: charter schools, Michigan, Michigan Education Association, Rick Snyder Posted Dec 28th 2011 at 10:26 am in Big Labor, Education |
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LAS VEGAS – While the Great Recession has affected almost all Americans, Nevadans may be the hardest hit. The state leads the nation in unemployment (13 percent) and home foreclosures (three times the national average).
Because of the faltering economy and slowed tax revenue, the Clark County School District needs to cut $78 million from its budget over the next two years. The district must do this either by freezing teacher pay and finding a more affordable employee health insurance carrier, or by laying off 1,000 educators as early as next month.
The first alternative is obviously preferable, because students would be adversely affected by larger class sizes and the loss of many enthusiastic young teachers. Unfortunately, the second option may be unavoidable, because the district has been unable to negotiate a new contract with its teachers union, the Clark County Education Association (CCEA).
CCSD is the fifth largest school district in the nation, serving around 310,000 students in 340 schools in and around Las Vegas. The district is also the largest employer in Nevada with some 33,000 employees, 18,000 of which are teachers.
The main sticking point seems to be the district’s desire to find a less expensive health insurance provider. CCEA members currently receive health insurance from the Teachers Health Trust, a company actually owned and operated by their union. (more…)
Tags: health insurance, Las Vegas, Maine, Michigan, Nevada Posted Dec 22nd 2011 at 4:34 pm in Big Labor, Education, Local Government, News |
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The SEIU’s Insidious Tentacles continue to infiltrate government and politics at the expense of its own rank and file without attracting national media attention. Interestingly enough the mainstream media will not peek beneath the covers and investigate reports by employees and employers, such as those detailed in The Devil at My Doorstep, who have been abused by the SEIU’s ruthless tactics and/or the reports of corrupt political connections , government infiltration and pay-to-play ties to the current administration. Several interesting stories have surfaced during the past month, yet not one has received the national attention it deserves through investigative journalism by the national mainstream media.
Among the events:
1. ) On November 10, 2011 a Washington Examiner article reported on SEIU activities in Michigan, a state desperately attempting to pass a RTW bill to stop big labor from usurping employee rights and money, involving the SEIU’s infiltration of state government and how the SEIU Siphons ‘Dues’ from Mich. Medicaid Payments.
Tags: Andy Stern, Card Check, Craig Becker, EFCA, Labor Posted Dec 16th 2011 at 11:49 am in Big Labor, Uncategorized |
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I guess NATSLA – that is, the “North American Teacher/Student Love Association”* – will have to look for members in places other than Michigan. That’s because the Michigan legislature will likely pass a bill that would make it a crime for teachers and students to have sex.
It’s incredible that such a bill is necessary. Can’t we just expect the tiny fraction of overly-randy teachers to control themselves? Apparently not.
So the full-time Michigan legislature – which is often looking for new laws to pass to fill its time – is tackling the issue head-on.
“The bill was sparked by concerns from prosecutors who said they were unable to charge teachers who had sex with students after the students turned 18, including one who waited until the day after the girl’s birthday before taking to her a hotel room.”
Who’s willing to bet this teacher splurged and rented a room at the Holiday Inn Express instead of the usual Super 8? Anybody?
Why aren’t the unions cleaning out their own ranks, thereby making such a bill unnecessary? It’s hard for union teachers to demand to be treated like professionals when issues like this must be addressed.
But never fear: Those deep-thinking legislators did raise some concerns.
Tags: Michigan, public education, teachers Posted Nov 6th 2011 at 7:14 am in Education |
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This week, the 99th annual Wyoming State Fair hosted a swine show, a performance pork contest and even a “pig ‘n mud” wrestling championship. But the biggest hog of all? The fair itself.
The fair has become a pricey pork barrel project that uses Wyoming state tax dollars to subsidize more than three-quarters of the cost of operating the event each year.
In fact, state lawmakers snatched more than $1.4 million from taxpayers to bankroll this year’s fair, which ends its eight-day run on Saturday.
If the attendance figures hold steady this year, every time someone pays the fair’s $3 admission fee, taxpayers will spend $32.29 to subsidize the rest of the cost of the attendees’ visit to the fair.
So why is the Wyoming State Fair such a budgetary burden?
Part of the problem is that Douglas, where the Wyoming State Fair is held, is just this side of East Jesus. The town has a population of only 6,120 and sits 50 miles from Casper and 125 miles from Cheyenne, the only two cities in the state with a population over 50,000.
Tags: casper, cheyenne, Illinois, Indiana, Michigan Posted Aug 18th 2011 at 1:11 pm in Politics, State Government, State Politics |
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Barack Obama, a man who listens to no one, is about to commence with his listen-to-me-or-else listening tour. Although the president totes a Teleprompter with him everywhere he goes, like every seasoned thespian Obama knows that a dry run is necessary to ensure that when the show officially takes to the road the script flows naturally, which must be what the Holland, Michigan Johnson Controls rehearsal was all about.
Fresh off approving hidden camera photos of himself saluting dead American war heroes against the wishes of the surviving families and hosting an Iftar “there’s no them and us — it’s just us” Muslim-praising dinner at the White House, Barack felt it was imperative that he head to Michigan to lay the foundational tone of the tour.
What better place to prepare for the three-day trip than at a “global diversified company in the building and automotive industries” that manufactures “complete lithium-ion battery cells and systems for hybrid and electric cars.” In other words, an automotive plant that makes batteries for electric cars that aren’t selling as briskly as overly optimistic analysts had originally predicted.
Not coincidentally, Johnson Controls is the recipient of $300 million of Obama’s stimulus money as part of the administration’s focus on so-called “green” technology and jobs. Nowhere on the President’s Teleprompter was the part about the resulting “green” jobs costing about $2 million each.
Tags: Ben and Jerry's, Blame Republicans, Holland, Iftar, Johnson Controls Posted Aug 14th 2011 at 5:39 am in Politics |
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As states around the country continue to face ongoing projected budget deficits, many elected officials are advocating consumption tax hikes in an effort to close budget holes (see Dayton, Mark and Democrats, Minnesota). However, New Hampshire recently cut its cigarette tax in a move to increase revenue and now Michigan—the state generally regarded as having the worst economy in the country—may follow suit.
Senate Bill 517 would roll back the $2 per pack cigarette excise tax, among the highest in the nation, and reset it at $1 per pack. It would be partnered with budget cuts including an option that would tighten up Medicaid restrictions, loosened by the previous Democratic administration.
As with New Hampshire, experts believe the move could enable Michigan to become more competitive vis a vis neighboring states with higher cigarette taxes, encouraging consumers to purchase their cigarettes within the state rather than elsewhere. In addition, the move could reduce the attractiveness of smuggled cigarettes illegally sold without tax being levied. Studies by the Mackinac Center for Public Policy have estimated that nearly 35 percent of all cigarettes consumed within the state were purchased outside its borders, in Indiana, Ohio and even Kentucky. The estimated tax-induced smuggling in Michigan, which increased steadily as the taxes on cigarettes also increased, was a hefty 16 percent, the fifth highest in the nation.
Cap-and-trade legislation may have failed in Congress in 2010, but that doesn’t mean that this is the last we will hear from this economically-harmful policy.
The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) through the Clean Air Act has been busily proposing and finalizing nearly 200 major policy rules aimed at curbing carbon and other particulate emissions. This despite the fact that the Clean Air Act was never intended for this purpose and widespread opposition exists among the business community, citizens and states.
One particular regulation that is generating deep concern among the business community is the Utility Maximum Achievable Control Technology rule or better know as the MACT rule. This rule would require coal-fired plants to reduce emissions of particular toxic air pollutants.
The big problem with this is MACT would require coal-fired power plants to install very costly equipment to comply with the regulation. In some cases, these companies simply can’t afford to buy the equipment and for others the needed equipment isn’t commercially available.
If this rule is implemented, it would force the shut down of many coal-fired power plants. For states like Ohio, who rely on coal power for 90 percent of their energy, this is a major problem. According to some estimates, enough coal-fired power plants would close to equal about 30-70 gigawatts of electricity generated nationwide. A single gigawatt of energy can power about 750,000 homes.
Tags: ALEC, cap-and-trade, clear air act, coal plant, coal power Posted Jun 2nd 2011 at 10:31 am in Environment, Obama, Regulation, energy |
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So, with Mitch Daniels out of the Presidential race, what do we make of the GOP field? Daniels, despite some possible quibbles, had a very compelling argument for his candidacy. First and foremost was his solid record as Governor. He cut government, curtailed the power of public sector unions and, just in the last few weeks, won groundbreaking education reform. Sure, he was a bit boring and something of a technocrat, but after 3+ years of flim-flammy flash and dash, a little adult supervision seemed in order.
A more compelling case, I believed, was where Daniels was from. Indiana sits in that great swath of the industrial heartland of America. Pittsburgh, Cincinnati, Cleveland, Detroit, Indianapolis, St. Louis, Chicago, Milwaukee, among many other cities and towns are the bed-rock of America’s industrial might. The West Coast may have the glitz and the East Coast may have the financial power, but neither is possible without the hard toil of the lunchbox crowd in the Midwest. It is the “America that works.” Unfortunately, the Midwest is also the region that has been most battered by the failed policies of the last few decades. Look no further than Detroit to see what happens when progressivism’s “best intentions” crash upon the rocks of economic reality.
It has been a long time since America had a President who knew and understand our industrial heartland. (Yes, I realize Barack Obama is from Illinois, but c’mon…is there any evidence his presidency-as-academic-symposium understands the first thing about how the private sector works?) A candidate from this region would not only have an innate understanding of the proverbial “Joe Six Pack”, he or she would also appreciate how over-taxation and over-regulation can stifle an economic engine. A candidate who has lived among abandoned factories and shuttered steel mills would understand that the policy whims of the mandarins in DC have real-world consequences.
Daniels understood this world. But, he’s out. However, based on growing on-line chatter, someone else from America’s shop-floor may be about to enter the race: Rep. Thaddeus McCotter, from Michigan.
Apparently, the Big Labor-related death threats aren’t limited to Wisconsin. Or to lawmakers.
This following email is just in from our friends at The Mackinac Center for Public Policy:
<start email>
“The Mackinac Center for Public Policyreceived numerous death threats and bomb threats in the aftermath of national publicity about a Freedom of Information Act request it sent to three public universities.
The messages were left on the Center’s voice mail Thursday night and early Friday morning, but it is unclear at this point if one or two women were responsible for the threats.
Mackinac Center President Joseph Lehman said the Mackinac Center has contacted law enforcement about the threats.
“We, along with the authorities, are doing everything necessary to protect ourselves,” Lehman said. “No threats will prevent us from showing the public how universities spend tax dollars.”
There were five messages left containing death or bomb threats. Four of them appear to be from the same caller. A fifth message was from a woman who left a death threat and, unlike the previous caller, left her name and indicated she lived in a neighboring state. It was unclear if the second caller was the same as the first caller.
A female voice said:
“Scotty Walker is dead. So are you. We know where you live.” The woman then recited the Mackinac Center’s address and said, “We are coming up to destroy you.”
Tags: bomb threat, Death Threats, emails, FOIA, Governor Scott Walker Posted Apr 1st 2011 at 1:38 pm in Big Labor, Economics, Justice/Legal, Local Government, News, State Politics |
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In Michigan, police were caught on tape stealing private property:
What do you want to take in the basement? Do you want to take the drums and all that (expletive), or no?
The police took three pages worth of property that included a 52” flat-screen TV, a DVD player, two computers, a camera and several DVDs.
Why does this kind of abuse happen? The answer is civil forfeiture.
In the United States, if the government suspects that you committed a crime, officials can arrest you and put you on trial. The government must then prove you are guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.
But if the government suspects that your property was involved in a crime, under civil forfeiture laws officials can take and sell your property. In most instances, they get to pocket the proceeds. Importantly, they don’t have to prove you did anything wrong. This sounds bizarre, but with civil forfeiture,your property is guilty until you prove it innocent.
As civil forfeiture expert Scott Bullock explains in the above video:
You cannot give the very people who are out there enforcing the laws a direct incentive to try to take homes, cars, currency, and other property from citizens. Under the law in over 40 states, police and prosecutors are allowed to keep all or most of the property that they seize. So this gives them a very direct incentive to go out and take as much property from citizens as possible.
This explains why one of the police officers caught on tape says, “If Luke comes down here, he’s gonna wanna take everything . . . he’s gonna give us a chance to frickin’ take all this stuff.”
News coverage of Government Motors over the past few weeks has painted an increasingly glowing picture, but here’s a dose of reality: GM still has not repaid taxpayers for the bailout and it’s looking less and less like taxpayers will ever be made whole.
Unlike much of the media, we actually spent a considerable amount of time looking behind the press releases to see what GM’s numbers really say about the health of a company taxpayers now own.
This week, we will be sharing with readers a more realistic picture of the company’s health. The bottom line: The picture is far less rosy than GM would like you to believe.
1. GM’s Share Price: Will taxpayers ever be made whole?
Remember these promises?
“Recent progress at GM gives reason for optimism that it may be possible for taxpayers to get every penny back.” – Steve Rattner, Presidential Task Force on the Auto Industry (11/18/2010)
“American taxpayers are now positioned to recover more than my administration invested in GM.” – President Barack Obama (11/18/2010)
“The government’s investment is well placed, and I think they’ll make a lot of money.” – Former GM CEO Ed Whitacre (11/18/2010)
GM’s share price closed below its $33 IPO price for the first time on March 1st. The company has underperformed the S&P 500 by 15% since the beginning of the year. The Middle East is in turmoil and gas prices are skyrocketing. Not a good harbinger for GM’s share price.
Now the Feds say that they want to get out of their GM position as soon as possible. Their first opportunity to do so will be when the government’s “lockup period” ends in May.
But according to the House Oversight Panel’s January update on TARP and the auto industry, for U.S. taxpayers just to break even on the government’s historic $50 billion “investment”, GM shares will need to trade at $54.28 — a whopping 65% premium over GM’s March 1st closing price.
Tags: bailout, Federal Spending, General Motors, GM, government motors Posted Mar 7th 2011 at 2:44 pm in Federal Spending, Uncategorized |
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The high school graduate who cannot read his diploma is a favorite cliché among education reformers.
But like all clichés, it holds a lot of truth. Difficult as it may be to believe, there high school graduates who are barely able to read and write and do basic math. Their schools hand them a worthless piece of paper and send them out into the world. These kids are totally unprepared to handle life and the workaday world.
How is this possible? How can a child spend 13 years inside a classroom and have so few skills?
A big part of the reason is the automobile assembly line mentality that infiltrated of schools decades ago.
Consider a typical day in our public schools: a bell rings (bringing the learning process to a screeching halt), kids get out of their seat and shuffle off to their next class to do it all over again — like an assembly line.
And like many factories, the teachers are part of a union in which work responsibilities are narrowly-defined, innovation and initiative are stymied and penalized, and excellence is treated no differently than mediocrity.
Tags: American Federation of Teachers, Detroit, Education Action Group, Illinois, Indiana Posted Feb 1st 2011 at 12:21 pm in Big Labor, Education |
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The Grand Rapids Education Association, a local affiliate of Michigan’s largest teachers’ union, is attempting to pick off one-by-one 90-some members that have refused to pay their dues.
About 18 months ago, the school board voted to no longer deduct dues from employees’ paychecks, which meant union members had to physically write a check to the union. Many saw it as their opportunity to protest the obnoxious behavior of union leaders during a previous contract negotiation period. The union president, Paul Helder, was particularly pompous during negotiations, claiming the union was fighting a “war on terrorism.” He even established “War Time Committees” to organize the fight against the school board and administrators.
The judge, citing the fact that Michigan is not a right-to-work state, ruled she has to fork over the money, regardless of whether or not the union is representing her interests.
Let that marinate for a bit – because of current Michigan law, the union has the right to take a school employee to court and extract money out of her. Isn’t that grand?
If there is ever an opportunity to make Michigan a right-to-work state, this is it.
Tags: Marjorie Hayward, MEA, Michigan, Paul Helder, right-to-work Posted Jan 7th 2011 at 8:51 am in Big Labor, Education |
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Dick Morris has picked up on a theme Education Action Group has been trumpeting for months: public employee union contracts, including school employee contracts, are unsustainable and have several states on the verge of fiscal collapse.
Recently on Fox News, Morris suggested California, Michigan, Illinois, New York, and Connecticut are the top five most likely to default, given the severity of their situation and the unlikelihood of the Feds or bond holders coming to the rescue.
“Education Action Group has been way ahead of the curve on this,” Morris told me. “EAG has been showing the major spending problems, stemming from outrageous contracts, for quite some time.”
Buffalo Public Schools revealed recently that it spent $9 million last year alone on elective surgery for employees. Coverage for such an extravagance, by its very nature taking funds away from the education of children, was due to the collective bargaining agreement.
Tags: Buffalo, California, Cincinnati, Connecticut, Dick Morris Posted Nov 10th 2010 at 2:01 pm in Big Labor, Education |
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With most of the media focusing their 2010 election coverage on whether or not Republicans will reclaim one or both houses of Congress, the 37 states that are about to elect (or re-elect) a governor get lost in the shuffle.
If Republicans do as well as projected, most observers expect gridlock to descend upon Washington D.C. That means the real action and drama will be at the state level, where newly-elected governors will have to deal with high unemployment, shrinking budgets and public employee unions that will fight as if very existence is at stake (which it is).
Here’s a brief overview of what’s at stake for the governors of three states.
Michigan: The Wolverine State’s manufacturing-based economy has been ravaged by free trade agreements and obstinate unions. Since 2000, Michigan has lost over 900,000 jobs. The current unemployment rate is 13 percent, and unlikely to drop below double digits any time soon.
The state’s public employee pension funds are awash in red ink. The Mackinac Center reports that the state has underfunded pension plans by almost $12 billion. The state’s next governor will almost surely be Michigan businessman Rick Snyder who ran under the slogan, “One tough nerd.” Come November 3, Mr. Snyder will face one tough job.
Ohio: Like its neighbor to the north, the Buckeye State is barely hanging on. The unemployment rate is 10 percent, which only exacerbates the state’s “structural budget shortfall” that could reach $8 billion by 2012. On top of that, the State Teachers Retirement System (STRS) has $40 billion in unfunded liabilities.
On the bright side, Ohio was recently awarded $400 million in federal funds from the Obama administration’s “Race to the Top” initiative. The bad news: after four years, that money will dry up. Since Ohio spends “49 percent more on district-level bureaucracy than the national average,” there will have to be some big changes to the public education system.
Tags: Andrew Cuomo, Chris Christie, John Kasich, Michigan, New Jersey Posted Nov 1st 2010 at 2:53 pm in Economics, Education, Midterm Elections |
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There simply is no other way to explain the statements of White House Chief of Staff Jacob Lew this morning on CNN's State of the Union. Lew was asked by Candy Crawley about a recent statement by Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid indicating he would not be bringing a...