From California Policy Center <[email protected]>
Subject Oh the irony...
Date May 7, 2021 4:05 PM
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
This week marked Teacher Appreciation Week – a time when, in normal years, students may have gifted their beloved instructors with apples

May 7th, 2021
VIEW IN YOUR BROWSER ([link removed])
[link removed]
John,

This week marked Teacher Appreciation Week – a time when, in normal years, students may have gifted their beloved instructors with apples or homemade cards of appreciation. But with many schools still locked down thanks to union intransigence, some took their celebratory messages to Twitter.

And boy, were they ironic ([link removed]) .

“We celebrate and thank you,” read a tweet ([link removed]) by Assemblymember Patrick O’Donnell, D-Long Beach. Another shared similar sentiment. ([link removed]) Well-meaning as those messages may have been, they came only days after the Tweet writers, along with their other Democratic colleagues that make up the Committee on Public Employment and Retirement, killed a bill that would have protected a very basic right of California educators.

In true appreciation of teachers, Asm. Kevin Kiley, R-Rocklin, introduced Assembly Bill 1484 ([link removed]) . But Kiley’s bill didn’t get so much as a committee hearing. That’s thanks to a bevy of new rules implemented by the supermajority party ([link removed]) that make it easy to quash proposals brought by Republicans early in the legislative process.

Kiley’s proposal is simple: ensure California educators have the information they need about their union membership rights. This was no mere feel-good proclamation that honors teachers. It would have brought California into compliance with the Supreme Court’s decision in Janus v. AFSCME, which gave government workers the right to work without paying a union – and which said government employers must have proof a worker has knowingly consented to join the union before deducting dues from their paychecks. AB 1484 would have required that proof and safeguarded teachers’ paychecks as a result.

That’s why CPC authored this letter of support for the bill ([link removed]) , and worked with Kiley’s team to ensure the language of the legislation would adequately bring California into compliance with the Janus decision.

If you’d like to donate to efforts like these, you can do so here ([link removed]) .

When Michigan implemented this safeguard by regulation last year, 13 percent of the unionized civil service employees ([link removed]) chose not to rejoin the union, though they’ve had the freedom to leave for years. In California, 22 percent of teachers and staff have chosen not to pay union dues since the Janus decision, according to public records we’ve collected from school districts representing over 160,000 school employees.

For politicians who rely on union campaign contributions as so many in Sacramento do, it makes sense to prevent a bill like AB 1484 from seeing the light of day. Workers won’t drop union membership if they don’t know they are allowed to.

Teachers unions have displayed particularly disgusting behavior this past year, but we all know educators who are as fed up with unions as we are. Before this Teacher Appreciation Week comes to a close, thank those educators in your life. And if you really want to do something nice for them, send them this link to CPC’s My Pay. My Say ([link removed]) . There, teachers (and all government employees) can get the information Sacramento politicians are trying to hide about dropping union membership.


More from CPC
* Analysis: California’s charter school Renaissance continues ([link removed])
* The immense education “investment” fraud ([link removed])
* Listen: A tale of two bills ([link removed])
* California’s gubernatorial candidates need to show true grit ([link removed])



CPC and allies in the news
* California lawmakers praise teachers, while restricting their rights ([link removed])
* CEO magazine: Texas, Florida best states for business; California, New York, Illinois the worst ([link removed]) ([link removed])
* Panel: The future of policing includes community partnerships ([link removed])
* Lyft rides increased demand for service ([link removed])
* Some states are finally getting serious about addressing police misconduct ([link removed])
* CPC board member David Bahnsen makes appearance in Hannity’s interview with Caitlyn Jenner: ([link removed])



Classroom headlines
* Biden believes in science – so long as the teachers’ unions approve ([link removed])
* Another window on ZOOM ([link removed])
* In the name of equity, California will discourage students who are gifted at math ([link removed])
* Stuck in quarantine: Rocklin parents say students forced to teach themselves, call for change in policy ([link removed])
* LAUSD teachers oppose adding 10 days to school year, union says ([link removed])
* Anti-critical race theory school curriculum candidates win big in Texas town with 70 percent of vote ([link removed])
* How the closure of in-school learning damaged U.S. children’s mental health during the pandemic ([link removed])


COVID and openings
* Powerful teachers unions dictating terms of reopening to CDC, school districts ([link removed])
* White House: Schools should ‘probably’ open in the fall. Also: ‘maybe,” and ‘It depends.” ([link removed])
* New York Gov. Cuomo stuns Broadway and cultural world with lifting of pandemic capacity restrictions on May 19 ([link removed])
* End of face masks in the classroom as Boris Johnson defies unions ([link removed])
* The liberals who can’t quit lockdown ([link removed])


Other things we’re reading
* Appellate court decision on Kiley/Gallagher lawsuit against Gov, Newsom’s ‘one man rule’ ([link removed])
* Another big tech company closes SF offices, will have no HQ ([link removed])
* California #50 (again) in Chief Executive Magazine’s best and worst states for business 2021 ([link removed])
* New income tax hike could go to 16.8%; ‘Best path forward is for the Legislature to focus on helping employers create and maintain jobs’ ([link removed])
* The illogic of public sector unions ([link removed])
* Costa Mesa uses federal aid to end worker furloughs, restore missed pay ([link removed])


Connect with CPC

Want to keep up with CPC and our partners during the week? Follow us on Twitter ([link removed]) , join our Facebook ([link removed]) community, and sign up to be part of the growing Parent Union ([link removed]) .

***

Chantal Lovell is the communications director for California Policy Center.



** ABOUT THE CALIFORNIA POLICY CENTER
------------------------------------------------------------

The California Policy Center promotes prosperity for all Californians through limited government and individual liberty.

Learn more at CaliforniaPolicyCenter.org.
[link removed]
FACEBOOK ([link removed])
[link removed]
TWITTER ([link removed])
[link removed]
WEBSITE ([link removed])
Support the California Policy Center. Donate Today. ([link removed])

============================================================

** MAKE A TAX DEDUCTIBLE DONATION TO THE CALIFORNIA POLICY CENTER ([link removed])

The California Policy Center is a 501c3 non-profit
CA Corp. #3295222. Federal EIN 27-2870463.
Copyright © California Policy Center 2016.
All rights reserved.

This email was sent to [email protected] (mailto:[email protected])
why did I get this? ([link removed]) unsubscribe from this list ([link removed]) update subscription preferences ([link removed])
California Policy Center . 18002 Irvine Blvd Ste 108 . Tustin, CA 92780-3321 . USA
Screenshot of the email generated on import

Message Analysis