Wisconsin teachers jobs saved.... thanks Walker!

Cancel 2016.2

The Almighty
http://www.weeklystandard.com/articles/walker-s-vindication_577310.html?nopager=1

On June 29 at 12:01 a.m., Koczela could finally breathe a sigh of relief. The budget repair bill​—​delayed for months by protests, runaway state senators, and a legal challenge that made its way to the state’s supreme court​—​was law. The 27 teachers on the chopping block were spared.

With “collective bargaining rights” limited to wages, Koczela was able to change the teachers’ benefits package to fill the budget gap. Requiring teachers to contribute 5.8 percent of their salary toward pensions saved $600,000. Changes to their health care plan​—​such as a $10 office visit co-pay (up from nothing)​—​saved $200,000. Upping the workload from five classes, a study hall, and two prep periods to six classes and two prep periods saved another $200,000. The budget was balanced.

imagine that... saving the jobs of 27 teachers... oh those evil Reps....
 
What a horrible man, he should have hired one Superintendent (never can have enough of those) and fired all those teachers. That's the only way to get the support of the Teacher's Union...
 
http://www.weeklystandard.com/articles/walker-s-vindication_577310.html?nopager=1



imagine that... saving the jobs of 27 teachers... oh those evil Reps....

How many teachers are in Wisconsin I wonder? A $10 copay increase saves $200k. That means 20,000 doctor visits. Holy crap. I hate going to the doctor so bad my appendix ruptured and I tried to 'tough it out.' Thank goodness my wife after sleeping through the night realized something was wrong with me since I was lying on the floor moaning and forced me into the hospital. Of course I had no idea my appendix had ruptured, but it makes for a story that makes me sound tough.... or stupid.... either works for me.
 
How many teachers are in Wisconsin I wonder? A $10 copay increase saves $200k. That means 20,000 doctor visits. Holy crap. I hate going to the doctor so bad my appendix ruptured and I tried to 'tough it out.' Thank goodness my wife after sleeping through the night realized something was wrong with me since I was lying on the floor moaning and forced me into the hospital. Of course I had no idea my appendix had ruptured, but it makes for a story that makes me sound tough.... or stupid.... either works for me.

The article stated 'changes to their health care - LIKE a $10 co-pay' saved $200k. The co-pay was not the only change to their health care.
 
More vindication of Scott Walker:

The Hartland-Lakeside School District, about 30 miles west of Milwaukee in tiny Hartland, Wis., had a problem in its collective bargaining contract with the local teachers union.

The contract required the school district to purchase health insurance from a company called WEA Trust. The creation of Wisconsin's largest teachers union -- "WEA" stands for Wisconsin Education Association -- WEA Trust made money when union officials used collective bargaining agreements to steer profitable business its way.

The problem for Hartland-Lakeside was that WEA Trust was charging significantly higher rates than the school district could find on the open market. School officials knew that because they got a better deal from United HealthCare for coverage of nonunion employees. On more than one occasion, Superintendent Glenn Schilling asked WEA Trust why the rates were so high. "I could never get a definitive answer on that," says Schilling.

Changing to a different insurance company would save Hartland-Lakeside hundreds of thousands of dollars that could be spent on key educational priorities -- especially important since the cash-strapped state government was cutting back on education funding. But teachers union officials wouldn't allow it; the WEA Trust requirement was in the contract, and union leaders refused to let Hartland-Lakeside off the hook.

That's where Wisconsin's new budget law came in. The law, bitterly opposed by organized labor in the state and across the nation, limits the collective bargaining powers of some public employees. And it just happens that the Hartland-Lakeside teachers' collective bargaining agreement expired on June 30. So now, freed from the expensive WEA Trust deal, the school district has changed insurers.

"It's going to save us about $690,000 in 2011-2012," says Schilling. Insurance costs that had been about $2.5 million a year will now be around $1.8 million. What union leaders said would be a catastrophe will in fact be a boon to teachers and students.

Read more at the Washington Examiner: http://washingtonexaminer.com/polit...ols-buck-union-cut-health-costs#ixzz1USHC9HrN
 
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