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Related: About this forumNewark Teachers Union endorses TFA-linked "Teachers Village" -- a round robin of corruption...
By now, those of us in Jersey are well aware of the construction trade unions' endorsement of Chris Christie...I guess these supposed "allies" of teachers and cops think Christie's "pro-business" policies will lead to more jobs... it still stings mightily... Weren't we all supposed to be sticking together as a united labor movement? After all, the leaders of New Jersey's public worker unions have happily stood up and endorsed public works programs when they meant creating union construction jobs.Take, for example, the president of the Newark Teachers Union, Joe Del Grosso...Here's Del Grosso supporting the Teachers Village project in Newark that, apparently, created union construction jobs for AFL-CIO members.
Keep in mind that the Newark Teachers Union is affiliated with the American Federation of Teachers, which is, in turn, an affiliate of the AFL-CIO. And it was only with the AFL-CIO's support that the developers of Teachers Village could get the New Markets Tax Credits necessary to make this project so lucrative for the big-money boys who financed it. So it was, of course, perfectly natural that Del Grosso would support a project that would create jobs for AFL-CIO members in the building trades...
Normally, I wouldn't think this was a particularly noteworthy story... But then I took a look at who serves on the Advisory Board for TFA-Newark, which will undoubtedly be the hub around which the state-wide TFA is built...
Ron Beit - hmm, where have I heard that name before? Oh, yeah, that's right - he's the developer behind Newark's Teachers Village...
As you might imagine, your taxpayers dollars are funding this experiment... $100 million in tax credits; not too shabby...
Beit's got himself one sweet deal, doesn't he? He uses $100 million in tax credits to finance a project in Newark, then lines up a group of charter schools as his business occupants, who will pay their rents with taxpayer funds....
Now, I want to be fair: there is no reporting that I have seen that confirms TFA has signed an agreement with Teachers Village akin to the deals they cut in Baltimore, Philadelphia, and Las Vegas. But when you look at the connections TFA has to Newark and Teachers Village, it's clear that a formal deal isn't even necessary:
=The primary developer of Teachers Village, Ron Beit, sits on the board of Teach For America Newark.
=One of the three charter schools housed at Teachers Village, TEAM Charter School (a KIPP school), is run by Ryan Hill, a 1999 TFA alum
=KIPP was instrumental in securing supplemental financing for Teachers Village
=Another occupant of Teachers Village, Great Oaks Charter School, "strongly encourages" TFA alumni to apply.
=Cami Anderson, the pro-charter State Superintendent of Newark, is the former Executive Director of TFA-New York and a 1993 TFA alum.
=The Foundation for Newark's Future, fueled by the $100 million grant from Mark Zuckerberg, gave $500,000 to TFA.
=One of the three charter schools housed at Teachers Village, TEAM Charter School (a KIPP school), is run by Ryan Hill, a 1999 TFA alum
=KIPP was instrumental in securing supplemental financing for Teachers Village
=Another occupant of Teachers Village, Great Oaks Charter School, "strongly encourages" TFA alumni to apply.
=Cami Anderson, the pro-charter State Superintendent of Newark, is the former Executive Director of TFA-New York and a 1993 TFA alum.
=The Foundation for Newark's Future, fueled by the $100 million grant from Mark Zuckerberg, gave $500,000 to TFA.
There is little doubt that TFA has many ties to Teachers Village, and that many of its corps members will rent apartments there. There is little doubt that the charter schools occupying Teachers Village will not have a unionized staff. And there is little doubt that Teachers Village is yet another step in the charterization of Newark's schools...
Newark Public Schools, under state control for decades, has already announced its intention to lay off staff; NTU leadership walked out of a budget meeting in protest. The unionized teaching jobs in Newark are being converted into non-unionized teaching posts in charters, often filled by TFA corps members.
And yet, despite all this, NTU's leaders have heartily endorsed Teachers Village: a project that will accelerate the growth of charters and the deunionization of Newark's Schools.
Is NTU unaware of what is happening in Chicago? In Philadelphia? That TFA is still pushing to place its members in these cities even as experienced, tenured, unionized teachers are being laid off? That non-unionized charters are an important part of TFA's clientele, with one-third of TFA's recruits placed in charters? Given all this, how does supporting Teachers Village help support NTU members?
As I have said many times before: I am a union guy. AFT-NJ and the NTU know that I am on their team. And I completely understand that when you're part of a larger organization, you sometimes have to do something you don't particularly want to do, if only to show solidarity.
But this, in my humble opinion, goes too far....
http://jerseyjazzman.blogspot.com/2013/07/how-newark-teachers-union-shot-itself.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+JerseyJazzman+%28Jersey+Jazzman%29
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