Posted on 06/14/2012 12:00:06 PM PDT by Kaslin
PHILADELPHIA Every pay period, the Philadelphia school district puts $155 per union member into a special fund that helps educators pay their personal legal bills, which includes everything from routine legal advice to estate planning.
That single perk, nestled deep within the Philadelphia Federation of Teachers union contract, cost taxpayers $2.6 million during the 2010-11 school year. It also contributed to the districts financial woes, which led to 2,200 teachers being laid off last year.
The PFT Legal Services Fund is just one example of Philadelphia public schools extravagant spending practices, which are the focus of EAGnews.orgs latest investigative report, Sucking the Life Out of Americas Public Schools: The Expense of Teachers Union Contracts.
Using figures from the 2010-11 school year, EAGs report details how the local teachers union the Philadelphia Federation of Teachers has larded up the districts budget with expenditures that benefit the adult employees, but have no demonstrative impact on student learning.
For example, Philadelphia taxpayers spent $165 million on health insurance for PFT members; union employees contributed less than 1 percent toward their insurance costs, according to documents obtained via open records laws.
But low-cost health insurance is just the beginning of the goodies given to PFT members. The Philadelphia school district also contributed $66 million to the union-controlled Health and Welfare Fund, which provides PFT members with dental, vision and prescription benefits.
Despite such generous health benefits, PFT members were absent a lot during the 2010-11 school year. Approximately 11,850 teachers took a combined 137,104 sick or personal days, which averages to 11.5 days per teacher in a 188-day work year.
The Philadelphia Federation of Teachers has roughly 16,000 members (not all of them classify as teachers), and during the 2010-11 school year they took a combined 236,863 days off including 36,830 days for wage continuation, 3,122 days for jury duty, 1,419 days for unauthorized leave without pay, and 9 days for religious mourning.
The wage continuation benefit protects employees against wage loss in the case of an illness, non-work related injury or other short-term disability which extends beyond an individuals available sick leave, according to PFTs teacher contract. This extra layer of cushion cost taxpayers $7.1 million during the previous school year.
Retiring PFT members were allowed to cash out their unused sick days and leave time, costing the district $15.3 million in severance pay.
All told, EAGnews.org found a total $135 million in questionable expenditures, money that could have prevented many of the 2,200 teacher layoffs.
The remaining PFT members are still enjoying a smooth ride on the public education gravy train, but its about to run out of track. If they refuse to make contract concessions, their train is going to derail, and the first class cabin may bear the brunt of the impact.
But it is for the CHILDREN!
Even AFTER being revealed and subsequent taxpayer outrage, Buffalo City school teachers have a free plastic-surgery clause - which cost about $9.5 million per year.
The school year didn't even start and I had the opportunity to buy as many as I wanted of those laptops real cheap.
There is a member on a distant branch of my family tree who has such a benefit through his union. Basically he uses it to legally harass people and/or companies he does not like.
And let’s not forget good ole Arlene Ackerman, one of America’s premier “MIgrant Workers!”
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arlene_Ackerman_(educator)
unionssuck.com is for sale on GoDaddy for $1,000
Fat Chance any of those pigs will take their snouts out of the trough when they can browbeat the taxpayers to keep filling it up!
Philthy Ping.
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