Archives for category: Michigan

Eclectablog reports that the lame duck legislature in Michigan was set to pass a bill legalizing people to carry concealed weapons in schools, churches and elsewhere. But the shooting in Connecticut brought a pause. Apparently some of the gun zealots think that if principals and teachers were armed, they could have had a firefight in the school.

Others think it would be best to keep high powered weapons out of the hands of everyone but the police and military.

UPDATE: ACCORDING TO A REPORT FROM A READER (SEE BELOW), THE LEGISLATION HAS PASSED AND IS GOING TO THE GOVERNOR FOR HIS SIGNATURE.

This past week, Michigan became the 24th state to pass a Right to Work (for Less) bill.

Wherever did the legislation originate?

The Center for Media and Democracy knows: it was copied almost verbatim from ALEC model legislation to quash unions.

ALEC, if you did not know, is a secretive organization with 2,000 or so members who are state legislators. It is funded by major corporations. It writes model laws that its members can introduce in their state.

It is, not surprisingly, anti-worker and pro-corporation.

it has model legislation for vouchers, charters, online charters, and getting rid of teacher tenure and certification. It wants to privatize public education, bust unions, and turn everything over to the vagaries of the free market.

Stephanie Simon of Reuters continues to be the most industrious investigative education journalist in the nation.

Here she reveals the outline of the free-market model of school, where students learn what they want, where they want, when they want, and pay for it with taxpayer dollars.

She calls it “a la carte” schooling.

It eliminates public schools as we have known them. It opens the door to private, for-profit vendors and anyone who hangs out a shingle.

Remember the old Hollywood movies where Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland said, “Hey, kids, let’s put on a show?”

Now, it’s “Hey, kids, let’s open a school and make money.”

The right to work legislation was approved by the Michigan State Senate.

Union protesters ringed the State Capitol building but were ignored (well, not exactly ignored, some got pepper sprayed).

Governor Rick Snyder pledged to sign it and said that it would bring the state together.

It surely clears the way for employers to hire hourly workers without benefits.

This is a thought-provoking article in the conservative National Review about Michigan Governor Rick Snyder’s campaign to install “legal dictators” in bankrupt cities. The larger issue, which the author does not address, is what happens to cities when their jobs are outsourced, when manufacturing leaves, when the economy has collapsed. Does the state then suspend all democratic rights and city over to a dictator?

Michigan was once one of the nation’ s strongest union states. But with the decimation of the automobile industry and the recent takeover of state government by extremely conservative politicians, the union movement is on the defensive.

Unions in Michigan tried and failed to pass a constitutional amendment supporting their right to bargain collectively.

Now, Governor Rick Snyder is talking openly about pushing right to work legislation.

The Michigan Chamber of Commerce supports the idea.

Tennessee passed such legislation last year, as did Indiana.

Wisconsin is considering it now.

The elimination of collective bargaining will give additional momentum to the growing income inequality in this country.

The New York Times had an article about fast-food workers in New York City who need food stamps to feed their families because their wages are so low. Sixty percent of  workers in this country now are hourly workers without benefits. Some have take-home pay, if they are lucky, of $18,000 a year.

Meanwhile, as Warren Buffet wrote recently, the Forbes 400 have an average annual income of $202 million.

$202 million a year.

Maybe the union movement will be born again as most Americans slide out of the middle class and into lives of not so gentle poverty.

Eclectablog daily digest

UPDATED: Are over half of Mich African Americans about to be under the control of an Emergency Financial Mgr

UPDATED: Are over half of Mich African Americans about to be under the control of an Emergency Financial Mgr?
Posted: 05 Dec 2012 11:23 AM PST
Look out, Detroit! It’s coming right for ya!

The Detroit Free Press is reporting this afternoon that an Emergency Financial Manager is being called “inevitable” for Detroit. If that happens, over half of the African Americans in Michigan will be under the rule of an Emergency Financial Manager, with little to no say in the operation of their local government.

Remember this chart?

City Population % African American # of African Americans
Benton Harbor 10,038 89.2% 8,954
Detroit 713,777 82.7% 590,294
Ecorse 9,512 46.4% 4,414
Flint 102,434 56.6% 57,978
Inkster 25,369 73.2% 18,570
Pontiac 59,515 52.1% 31,007
Total – – 711,217
[Source: U.S. Census Bureau]

Michigan had 9,883,640 residents in 2010, 14.2% of whom were African Americans for a total of 1,403,477. With the addition of Detroit and Inkster, the percentage of African Americans in Michigan without representative local government will be 50.7%.

Granted, the current law that is in effect, PA72, gives the Emergency Financial Managers a bit less power than the Emergency Managers under the now-repealed PA4. Nonetheless, EFMs control a great deal of what happens once they assume controls and the implications are only very slightly less onerous for African American Michiganders.

Here’s what the Freep is reporting:

Treasurer Andy Dillon has been meeting with Detroit’s elected officials today warning that the city’s financial condition means appointment of an emergency financial manager is all but inevitable, with today’s talks centered on who would be named to the position and what role Mayor Dave Bing and the City Council would have in governing the city, several people familiar with the discussions told the Free Press today.
A ranking city official who spoke only on condition of anonymity said he spoke with Dillon by phone this morning and was told that the Bing administration’s inability to fix Detroit’s immediate cash crisis and enact major financial reform gave the state no choice but to bring in an outside manager. {…}

The ranking city official told the Free Press that Dillon told him: “In about a month’s time they’ll have everything together. He said they won’t let payless paydays happen” and that the state would help the city meet payroll and pay bills while the emergency financial manager implemented tough reforms. He said Dillon said the EFM could turn around the city’s negative finances in about a year.

Several other people with knowledge of the conversations said the state’s frustration over Detroit’s inability to wrest savings from pay cuts and health care and pension benefits from current and city workers was exacerbated by recent Bing administration admissions that Detroit’s cash crisis is worsening by the day. At last count, Detroit was projected to be nearly $47 million short of money it will need to pay employees and its bills and debts by June 30.
Once again, the entire blame appears to being placed on the city workers who, in reality, are NOT the cause of the collapse of Detroit’s tax base. They will, however, be made to pay the price, make no mistake.

It’s interesting to see just how freaked out Republicans are about the prospect of a city like Detroit going bankrupt. Is it possible that it’s because a bankruptcy would financially hurt their business friends more acutely than if they can place all of the pain onto the backs of Detroit city workers? Something to consider…

Meanwhile, Attorney General Bill Schuette is asking for a speedy ruling on whether or not PA72 is actually in effect. A suit filed by Robert Davis alleges that PA72 was ended with the passage of PA4 and with PA4 now repealed, PA72 cannot, by law, be resurrected like a zombie, to walk the earth again, ruling failing cities and disenfranchising its voters.

Also, meanwhile, Republicans are readying a replacement for PA4 and there’s talk they may try to jam it through in the next two weeks before the lame duck session ends.

And so it goes in Michigan. Pray for us. We need it.

UPDATE: State Treasurer and, apparently, former Democrat Andy Dillon has confirmed that Detroit will begin the process for being put under the control of an Emergency Financial Manager:

State Treasurer Andy Dillon said the state will begin a 30-day review of Detroit’s finances in a process that could end with the appointment of an emergency financial manager.
Dillon told The Detroit News in an interview Wednesday that the new review likely will start next week. It’s necessary because the state’s previous review process was done under Public Act 4, which voters repealed in November. The new review would be performed under Public Act 72, the state’s previous emergency manager law.

“There’s been a further deterioration of finances since I last met with the city,” said Dillon, who met today with Mayor Dave Bing and City Council members. “We have to move more quickly than we currently are moving to resolve this.”

Asked if he expected the 30-day process to end in an emergency manager, Dillon said: “I won’t pre-judge, but that is the direction it clearly is headed. Hopefully, we can do this in cooperation with the mayor and council, and not in an adversarial fashion.”

Given the track record Dillon and his team have regarding how they treat cities undergoing this sort of review and the way they have treated Detroit in the past, I can’t imagine why on earth he thinks there might be adversity in this process! Why, I’ll be Detroit officials just roll over, show their bellies and lick his hand. [/sarcasm]

These guys have the bedside manner of the dentist in Little Shop of Horrors. They have created so much angst, animosity, and downright fear in the citizens of most Michigan urban areas that they have a hell of a lot of mending to do before they’ll get cooperation. And, frankly, that’s on them.

Below is a message that Sen. Rebekah Warren (MI-18) asked us to pass along in response to the petition “Stop the Takeover of Public Education in Michigan” (http://signon.org/sign/stop-the-takeover-of-1).

——————————————–

Dear Friend,

Thank you for contacting me to express your opposition to legislation that would transfer control from some of our public school districts to the newly created Education Achievement Authority (EAA).

House Bill 6004, along with House Bill 5923 and Senate Bill 1358, seeks to expand the scope of the EAA and allow unregulated school choice in Michigan. As you may know, the EAA was recently established to assume control of underperforming schools in the city of Detroit. This new package of bills broaden that power to allow the EAA to oversee schools deemed to be in the lowest performing 5% of schools statewide.

This hastily crafted legislation has already had several hearings in the House Education Committee and appears to be on the fast-track for passage in lame duck, despite the fact that the EAA has only been in place since the beginning of this school year, and has not yet been fully evaluated, much less vetted for statewide implementation. This legislation also allows for the unfettered proliferation of new schools, without regard for educational quality or outcomes, or the financial implications of further stretching increasingly scarce public resources.

I do not have to tell you that this sweeping legislation comes on the heels of a $500 million cut to the School Aid Fund and the passage of key elements of the “Parental Empowerment Package,” which most notably lifted the cap on charter and cyber schools. As these bills came before me on the Senate floor last year, I opposed all of them for a number of reasons, but largely because I remain deeply concerned about the far-reaching impact they stand to have on our children and the future of our public schools.

Here in Michigan this legislation is particularly alarming as 80% of our charter schools are operated by private, for-profit education management companies (EMOs), more than any other state in the nation. In response to growing concern about this astounding number, I am pleased to let you know that I have introduced Senate Joint Resolution R, which seeks to amend the state constitution to prohibit the operation of a public school on a for-profit basis.

Make no mistake – we are confronting a systematic and unrelenting assault on public education in Michigan. While House Bills 5923 and 6004 and Senate Bill 1358 have yet to come before the Senate, please rest assured that I will continue to fight for our public schools and work to ensure that all of our children have access to the top-notch education necessary to compete in our increasingly global economy.

As always, thank you for your advocacy on this important issue. Should you have any questions or need any further information, do not hesitate to contact me at (517) 373-2406 or senrwarren@senate.michigan.gov.

Sincerely,

Rebekah Warren
State Senator
18th District

RLW/wh

As the assault on public education continues in Michigan, those of us who live outside the state need a guide to follow the maneuvers of the anti-public education forces.

A reader in Michigan connected me to this site, Electablog, where I discovered the latest ploy

Voters in Michigan repealed Public Act 4, which authorized the governor to appoint an emergency manager for fiscally stressed districts. These managers had dictatorial powers, overriding locally elected governments. In three districts, the emergency managers were in process of replacing public schools with privatization.

According to this blog, the repeal also nullified an earlier law that preceded PA 4. But the judge decided that the repeal left the earlier law undisturbed. So while the voters rejected the emergency manager concept, their votes did not actually end the emergency manager concept.

The judge said the repel means nothing. Got it?

Listen on Friday to a live debate about the future of education in Michigan, featuring State Board member John Austin and Richard McLellan of the right wing Oxford Foundation.