The continuing fury around the Assn. of Classified Employees union vs. Culver City parents should become a larger story regarding deteriorating schools, unions, shrunken school budgets and concerned parents’ rights to support teachers and education with donated funds.
Here is an open letter, a simple appeal to ACE leadership to address five core elements of this disagreement.
The ACE “demand to bargain” against the School District over parent-funded adjuncts is being discussed at length. There are serious ethical issues around this dialogue that is essentially about our children. Since the School Board will soon make decisions regarding the future of the highly regarded adjunct program, it makes sense for concerned parties to try to focus on the real issues.
Many disputed facts can be resolved quickly. They are presented here as five assertions. If conclusions presented here might be debated, the very act of exploring them would serve to move real discussion forward.
It is proposed that all involved regard the following assertions as true. Any legitimate alternate view must address the underlying logic stated here.
1. Unionization of adjuncts will result in their in-class hours being reduced.
2. Unionization of adjuncts will be to the detriment of students.
3. Unionization will be to the detriment of adjuncts.
4. Unionization will be to the detriment of teachers.
5. Only the Assn. of Classified Employees will benefit from unionizing adjuncts.
These assertions are explained below.
1. Reduced in-class hours for adjuncts.
This is simple. Adjuncts are completely parent funded. That means the pool of money that pays all the expenses of the adjunct program is painstakingly raised with bake sales and individual donations. It is limited. If each unionized adjunct costs 50 percent more with higher wages and labor burden, then each donated dollar only buys two-thirds of what it did before. Further, consider the laws of consumer behavior relative to price. Parent donations (demand) are elastic. As the price increases, demand decreases. It must be expected that parents will donate less as each donated dollar buys less. If you increase the price of adjuncts, many parents will simply conclude they cannot afford to support the program. All parties like to express support for the adjunct program. However, the very real possibility that unionization will end the program must be front and center to any discussion.
2. To the detriment of students.
Parent donations are limited. If a union employee is doing the same work but only two-thirds of it, the students receive one-third less of the benefit. Period. However, if the argument is that union employees are supposed to be better than the current adjuncts, is the union employee 150 percent as effective? Since the value of adjuncts is the time students spend listening to native speakers, it is illogical to think union employees can provide the same benefit in one-third less time.
3. To the detriment of adjuncts.
The adjuncts have had the option of unionizing for decades. They never have chosen to unionize. If unionized, and if the program continues to exist at all, adjuncts will work fewer hours. But the total money received by adjuncts will unquestionably be less, probably much less. Any talk about a “living wage” is a smokescreen. Currently almost all the money that parents donate goes directly to the adjuncts. Conversely, if the union is allowed to confiscate these donations, money will be siphoned off for union dues and overhead costs. Like many facts, ACE has not even acknowledged that administration work that is currently done by parent volunteers will be done by city employees, paid for by the same parents who no longer have control over their program. This, of course, further reduces money available for adjuncts. The total amount of money actually going to the adjuncts will indisputably be less. Total donations to pay for all this should be expected to shrink significantly or even disappear, leaving adjuncts without a job. (See Assertion 1.)
4. To the detriment of teachers.
If teachers benefit from adjuncts in class, having fewer hours of support will be a sad loss to overworked teachers. (See Assertion 1.)
5. ACE will be the only beneficiary.
For the reasons explained above, students, adjuncts and teachers will, without question, be negatively affected by unionization. On the other hand, union power relies on its ability to suppress alternatives to the union. Increasing membership, collection of dues and the defense of turf are vital to the union. Adjuncts are not teachers’ aides and take no jobs from union workers. However, ACE stands to benefit nicely with the crippling or destruction of the volunteer adjunct program, creating more of a vacuum of in-class support to negotiate with. ACE has power to severely affect our children’s education, but it is only answerable to its members. Parents have no say or even opportunity to debate directly with them. Debbie Hamme, representing ACE, states that there is misleading information being disseminated. Sadly, this is true. She has made a continued effort to frame this issue around a single school, El Marino. This appears to be an effort to distract and divide parents who now realize that this is a district-wide issue, potentially ruining parent-funded positions at all Culver City schools. She also complains about 20 positions at El Marino. However, the truth is there are 20 part-time positions of three hours or less per day. That equates to 7.5 fulltime positions, not 20, for a program that serves over 750 children. Further, her concerns about “disparity” between schools are at best overstated. Instead of encouraging the formation and growth of parent-funded positions at other schools, the union has acted to effectively suppress the emerging parent groups at Lin Howe and La Ballona schools from putting adjuncts in their classrooms.
To move any reasonable discussion forward, these five assertions must be addressed directly and with candor.
Not doing so simply confirms deep mistrust fulminating in the community.
Unless ACE can address these assertions, everything else they say rings hollow.
Mr. Tjomsland may be contacted stopsawtelletower@gmail.com