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New York State United Teachers

New York State United Teachers (NYSUT) is a 600,000-member New York state teachers union, affiliated since 2006 with the American Federation of Teachers (AFT), the AFL–CIO, and the National Education Association (NEA). NYSUT is an umbrella group which provides services to local affiliates in New York state; lobbies on the local, state and federal level; conducts research; and organizes new members.

NYSUT
New York State United Teachers
FoundedMarch 30, 1972; 50 years ago (1972-03-30)
TypeLabor union
HeadquartersAlbany, New York, U.S.
Location
Members
612,297 (2014)[1]
Key people
Andrew Pallotta, president
AffiliationsAFT (AFL–CIO), NEA
Websitenysut.org

NYSUT's membership is diverse, representing all five membership categories of the AFT: preK through 12th grade teachers and paraprofessionals in the public and private sector; higher education faculty and paraprofessionals; public employees; private sector libraries; and nurses and other healthcare workers in the public and private sector.

There are more than 900 local affiliates of NYSUT, which range in size from locals of fewer than 10 members to the 140,000-member United Federation of Teachers (UFT) in New York City.

Officers of NYSUT are elected annually by a Representative Assembly (RA). The RA also elects a board of directors, which determines policy between conventions.

Composition

Total membership (US records)[2]

Finances (US records; ×$1000)[2]
     Assets      Liabilities      Receipts      Disbursements

According to NYSUT's Department of Labor records, about 33%, or a third, of the union's total membership are considered retirees, with eligibility to vote in the union. Other, voting ineligible, classifications include "special constituency" (2%) and "at-large" (1%). This accounts for 203,427 "retiree," 12,663 "special constituency," and 7,731 "at-large" members, compared to 388,476 "in-service" members.[1] Since the 2018 Janus vs. AFSCME non-union members do not pay dues. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Janus_v._AFSCME

History

In 1960, New York City social studies teacher Albert Shanker and Teachers Guild president Charles Cogen led New York City teachers out on strike. At the time, there were more than 106 teacher unions in the New York City public schools, many existing solely on paper, while others, like the Brooklyn Teachers Association, were real unions.

The motives behind the strike were wages, establishment of a grievance process, reduced workloads and more funding for public education. However to win on these issues, Shanker and Cogen argued, the city's teachers had to be in one union. In early 1960 the Teachers Guild merged with a splinter group from the more militant High School Teachers Association to form the United Federation of Teachers (UFT).

The UFT struck on November 7, 1960. More than 5,600 teachers walked the picket line, while another 2,000 engaged in a sick-out. It was a fraction of the city's 45,000 teachers. However, intervention by national, state and local AFL–CIO leaders pressured New York City mayor Robert Wagner to appoint a pro-labor fact-finding committee to investigate conditions in the city's schools and recommend a solution to the labor problem.

The fact-finding committee recommended a collective bargaining law, which eventually was forced onto the city's Board of Education by the state of New York. Despite a battle royale with the National Education Association (NEA), an infusion of cash by the AFT and the AFL–CIO enabled the UFT to win the December 16, 1961, election with 61.8 percent of the votes.

In 1967, the New York state legislature passed the Taylor Law, which provided collective bargaining rights to public employees. Both the NEA and AFT began rapidly organizing new members.

The NEA's state operation, the New York State Teachers Association (NYSTA), had been dominated by administrators until 1965, when they were excluded from membership.

The AFT's state affiliate, the Empire State Federation of Teachers, was very small. Shanker urged changes on the AFT state affiliate. The organization was renamed the New York State Federation of Teachers in the 1960s and the United Teachers of New York (UTNY) in 1971. That same year, Shanker was elected president of UTNY.

In 1971, the New York State legislature, under "messages of necessity" from Governor Nelson Rockefeller, enacted five "anti-teacher" laws. One extended the probationary period for new teachers from three to five years.

Shortly after, the executive director and other staff members of NYSTA began to meet with Shanker and his aides to discuss the possibility of a merger. Each union had spent large amounts of money battling the other for bargaining rights and members while the state legislature and local school districts steadily chipped away at union rights and collective bargaining agreements.

In 1971, Shanker and newly elected NYSTA president Thomas Hobart entered into formal merger negotiations. The merger agreement was signed March 30, 1972. Hobart was elected president and Shanker executive vice president. Other offices included Dan Sanders, first vice president; Antonia Cortese, second vice president; and Ed Rodgers, secretary-treasurer.

NYSUT and UTNY had sought and won approval for the merger from both parent unions, but tensions with the NEA quickly became apparent. Hobart and Shanker began promoting a merger between the NEA and AFT at NEA meetings, an effort that met with a hostile response. NEA leadership began to isolate NYSUT officers and delegates at conventions and other meetings. The NEA staff, working through the UniServ system (which provides services to NEA local unions), began to actively turn other state and local NEA members against the merged union.

In 1976, the NEA undertook an 'image enhancement' campaign in New York state. NYSUT officials saw this as a propaganda effort designed to undermine the merged union.

At the NYSUT convention in New York City that same year, delegates argued over the merits of the disaffiliation resolution. Shanker then delivered a powerhouse speech that galvanized the delegates. The delegates responded by passing a resolution that disaffiliated NYSUT from NEA.

Shanker and Hobart had, however, ignored a key provision in the merger agreement approved by both NEA and AFT. It stated that disaffiliation from either national group, within a five-year period of the 1972 merger, would obligate NYSUT to pay "liquidated damages" to the national organization from which NYSUT disaffiliated. NYSUT was ultimately required to pay NEA a multi-million dollar settlement.

NEA responded to the disaffiliation move by setting up a rival state organization, the New York Educators Association (NYEA). The NEA believed that many NYSUT locals, with at least 50,000 members, would leave the organization. While many locals disaffiliated from the NYSUT, a few soon rejoined. Over the next quarter-century, NYEA's membership stagnated, while NYSUT's exploded thanks to its leaders' decision to recruit members outside the field of education.

NYSUT's membership had, in fact, been diversified from the outset. The union welcomed paraprofessionals and other school-related personnel—including bus drivers, custodians, cafeteria workers, and others. It also affiliated several independent unions of higher education faculty. In 1979, the union began organizing registered nurses and other health care professionals in both public and private sector hospitals and clinics.

Shanker was elected president of the national AFT in 1974 but continued to hold his position in NYSUT until 1984. Shanker was elected to the executive council of the AFL–CIO in 1974 as well. His election represented the first time the AFT had a seat on the council. When, however, he voted against enhanced education funding in favor of Cold War measures (like the B-1 bomber), Shanker insisted that he was elected by all the members of the AFL–CIO convention and obliged, therefore, to vote against teachers when approval of defense appropriations was at issue.

Shanker died in 1997. Hobart retired as president of NYSUT in April 2005. He was succeeded by Richard Ianuzzi, NYSUT second vice president and a member of NYSUT's board of directors. In April 2014, Karen Magee was elected NYSUT president.

Political activity

Politically, 1973 was a pivotal year for NYSUT. The union adopted UTNY's Committee of 100 program, a group of many more than 100 members who agreed to lobby the state legislature in person twice each year. In 1967 NYSUT had created its own political action committee, VOTE-COPE, which was also melded into NYSUT. In 2005, the Committee of 100 counted several thousand members and VOTE-COPE raised more than $3 million in voluntary contributions.

Over the years, NYSUT's political activism has led it to be characterized as 'the 800-pound gorilla of New York politics.' Some of the union's accomplishments include:

  • In 1975, passage of a law guaranteeing tenure transfer rights and a maximum two-year probation period for teachers who switched districts;
  • In 1976, a legislative override of a veto of a bill requiring a formula for average funding of New York City public schools (it was the first override of a governor's veto in 104 years);
  • In 1977, a law providing for significantly enhanced enforcement powers for the state Public Employment Relations Board; and
  • In 1978, repeal of the Taylor Law's mandatory penalty of one year's probation for any public employee who went on strike.

NYSUT continued to expand collective bargaining rights for teachers as well. In 1981, the union won passage of a law granting collective bargaining rights for substitute teachers. In 1982, the state legislature passed the Triborough Amendment to the Taylor Law. Many school districts ceased to honor clauses they disliked in expired teacher union contracts, which led many locals to strike. The Triborough Amendment required school districts to honor the entire contract until a new agreement was reached, and the number of strikes fell drastically.

Professional development also became a concern. In 1984, NYSUT successfully pushed for passage of a state law creating and funding centers where teachers could obtain continuing education. In 1986, the union won passage of a bill creating mandatory mentor-intern programs in schools, so that established teachers would be able to mentor student-teachers during their internships in the public schools.

Retirement issues also came to the fore. NYSUT established a retiree division in 1976. In 1985, the state legislature passed a bill providing for full retirement benefits for any teacher aged 55 who had taught for at least 30 years. A year later, the union won passage of a bill giving school paraprofessionals a full year's retirement credit (12 months) for working a full 10-month school year.

For the 2012 New York's 18th congressional district the NYSUT endorsed Democrat Sean Patrick Maloney.[3]

2006 merger with NEA

On May 5, 2006, NYSUT voted to merge with the NEA/NY, the renamed NYEA. The 35,000-member NYEA had approved the merger agreement on April 29, 2006.[4] The merger became effective on September 1, 2006, and the newly merged union is now jointly affiliated with both the NEA and AFT.

The AFT has long sought merger with the NEA on a national level. But acrimonious relationships between the two unions on the local level and AFT's insistence on what NEA and its affiliates consider undemocratic practices and AFT's insistence upon affiliation with the AFL–CIO are significant obstacles. Among AFT's "undemocratic" practices are its abolition of the secret ballot, its requirement that delegates to its convention vote for officers by roll-call ballot, identifying their choices and their names in writing.

The two unions have continued to work together, however. After the failed merger attempt, the unions formed the 'NEAFT Partnership' to encourage joint policies on education, federal funding for public schools, and lobbying. The unions also agreed to support local- and state-level mergers where appropriate.

Three other states have merged AFT-NEA affiliates: Florida, Minnesota and Montana. Among local mergers is that in Wichita, Kansas, long a battleground for the two national unions, and Los Angeles. Combined, the merged units represent 197,000 members. The NEA has 2.7 million members, the AFT 1.7 million.

With the NYSUT merger, 681,000 members of the AFT (or about 52 percent) now belong to NEA.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b US Department of Labor, Office of Labor-Management Standards. File number 070-581. Report submitted November 25, 2014.
  2. ^ a b US Department of Labor, Office of Labor-Management Standards. File number 070-581. (Search)
  3. ^ "Democrat Sean Patrick Maloney Racks Up Nods From NYS AFL-CIO And NYSUT In NY-18 Bid". "NY Daily News. 2012-06-08. Retrieved 2012-10-04.
  4. ^ . Archived from the original on 2007-09-27.

Further reading

  • Berube, Maurice R. Teacher Politics: The Influence of Unions, Vol. 26. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Publishing Group, 1988. ISBN 0-313-25685-3
  • Braun, Robert J. Teachers and Power: The Story of the American Federation of Teachers. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1972. ISBN 0-671-21167-6
  • Eaton, William Edward. The American Federation of Teachers, 1916–1961: A History of the Movement. Urbana, IL: Southern Illinois University Press, 1975. ISBN 0-8093-0708-1
  • Gaffney, Dennis. Teachers United: The Rise of New York State United Teachers. Albany, N.Y.: State University of New York Press, 2007. ISBN 0-7914-7191-8
  • Gordon, Jane Anna. Why They Couldn't Wait: A Critique of the Black–Jewish Conflict Over Community Control in Ocean-Hill Brownsville, 1967–1971. Oxford: RoutledgeFalmer, 2001. ISBN 0-415-92910-5
  • Podair, Jerald. The Strike That Changed New York: Blacks, Whites, and the Ocean Hill-Brownsville Crisis. New Haven: Yale University Press, 2003. ISBN 0-300-08122-7

External links

  • Official website

york, state, united, teachers, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, article, introducing, more, precise, citations, november, 2010, learn, when, remove, this, temp. This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations November 2010 Learn how and when to remove this template message New York State United Teachers NYSUT is a 600 000 member New York state teachers union affiliated since 2006 with the American Federation of Teachers AFT the AFL CIO and the National Education Association NEA NYSUT is an umbrella group which provides services to local affiliates in New York state lobbies on the local state and federal level conducts research and organizes new members NYSUTNew York State United TeachersFoundedMarch 30 1972 50 years ago 1972 03 30 TypeLabor unionHeadquartersAlbany New York U S LocationUnited StatesMembers612 297 2014 1 Key peopleAndrew Pallotta presidentAffiliationsAFT AFL CIO NEAWebsitenysut wbr orgNYSUT s membership is diverse representing all five membership categories of the AFT preK through 12th grade teachers and paraprofessionals in the public and private sector higher education faculty and paraprofessionals public employees private sector libraries and nurses and other healthcare workers in the public and private sector There are more than 900 local affiliates of NYSUT which range in size from locals of fewer than 10 members to the 140 000 member United Federation of Teachers UFT in New York City Officers of NYSUT are elected annually by a Representative Assembly RA The RA also elects a board of directors which determines policy between conventions Contents 1 Composition 2 History 3 Political activity 4 2006 merger with NEA 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksComposition EditTotal membership US records 2 Finances US records 1000 2 Assets Liabilities Receipts Disbursements According to NYSUT s Department of Labor records about 33 or a third of the union s total membership are considered retirees with eligibility to vote in the union Other voting ineligible classifications include special constituency 2 and at large 1 This accounts for 203 427 retiree 12 663 special constituency and 7 731 at large members compared to 388 476 in service members 1 Since the 2018 Janus vs AFSCME non union members do not pay dues https en wikipedia org wiki Janus v AFSCMEHistory EditIn 1960 New York City social studies teacher Albert Shanker and Teachers Guild president Charles Cogen led New York City teachers out on strike At the time there were more than 106 teacher unions in the New York City public schools many existing solely on paper while others like the Brooklyn Teachers Association were real unions The motives behind the strike were wages establishment of a grievance process reduced workloads and more funding for public education However to win on these issues Shanker and Cogen argued the city s teachers had to be in one union In early 1960 the Teachers Guild merged with a splinter group from the more militant High School Teachers Association to form the United Federation of Teachers UFT The UFT struck on November 7 1960 More than 5 600 teachers walked the picket line while another 2 000 engaged in a sick out It was a fraction of the city s 45 000 teachers However intervention by national state and local AFL CIO leaders pressured New York City mayor Robert Wagner to appoint a pro labor fact finding committee to investigate conditions in the city s schools and recommend a solution to the labor problem The fact finding committee recommended a collective bargaining law which eventually was forced onto the city s Board of Education by the state of New York Despite a battle royale with the National Education Association NEA an infusion of cash by the AFT and the AFL CIO enabled the UFT to win the December 16 1961 election with 61 8 percent of the votes In 1967 the New York state legislature passed the Taylor Law which provided collective bargaining rights to public employees Both the NEA and AFT began rapidly organizing new members The NEA s state operation the New York State Teachers Association NYSTA had been dominated by administrators until 1965 when they were excluded from membership The AFT s state affiliate the Empire State Federation of Teachers was very small Shanker urged changes on the AFT state affiliate The organization was renamed the New York State Federation of Teachers in the 1960s and the United Teachers of New York UTNY in 1971 That same year Shanker was elected president of UTNY In 1971 the New York State legislature under messages of necessity from Governor Nelson Rockefeller enacted five anti teacher laws One extended the probationary period for new teachers from three to five years Shortly after the executive director and other staff members of NYSTA began to meet with Shanker and his aides to discuss the possibility of a merger Each union had spent large amounts of money battling the other for bargaining rights and members while the state legislature and local school districts steadily chipped away at union rights and collective bargaining agreements In 1971 Shanker and newly elected NYSTA president Thomas Hobart entered into formal merger negotiations The merger agreement was signed March 30 1972 Hobart was elected president and Shanker executive vice president Other offices included Dan Sanders first vice president Antonia Cortese second vice president and Ed Rodgers secretary treasurer NYSUT and UTNY had sought and won approval for the merger from both parent unions but tensions with the NEA quickly became apparent Hobart and Shanker began promoting a merger between the NEA and AFT at NEA meetings an effort that met with a hostile response NEA leadership began to isolate NYSUT officers and delegates at conventions and other meetings The NEA staff working through the UniServ system which provides services to NEA local unions began to actively turn other state and local NEA members against the merged union In 1976 the NEA undertook an image enhancement campaign in New York state NYSUT officials saw this as a propaganda effort designed to undermine the merged union At the NYSUT convention in New York City that same year delegates argued over the merits of the disaffiliation resolution Shanker then delivered a powerhouse speech that galvanized the delegates The delegates responded by passing a resolution that disaffiliated NYSUT from NEA Shanker and Hobart had however ignored a key provision in the merger agreement approved by both NEA and AFT It stated that disaffiliation from either national group within a five year period of the 1972 merger would obligate NYSUT to pay liquidated damages to the national organization from which NYSUT disaffiliated NYSUT was ultimately required to pay NEA a multi million dollar settlement NEA responded to the disaffiliation move by setting up a rival state organization the New York Educators Association NYEA The NEA believed that many NYSUT locals with at least 50 000 members would leave the organization While many locals disaffiliated from the NYSUT a few soon rejoined Over the next quarter century NYEA s membership stagnated while NYSUT s exploded thanks to its leaders decision to recruit members outside the field of education NYSUT s membership had in fact been diversified from the outset The union welcomed paraprofessionals and other school related personnel including bus drivers custodians cafeteria workers and others It also affiliated several independent unions of higher education faculty In 1979 the union began organizing registered nurses and other health care professionals in both public and private sector hospitals and clinics Shanker was elected president of the national AFT in 1974 but continued to hold his position in NYSUT until 1984 Shanker was elected to the executive council of the AFL CIO in 1974 as well His election represented the first time the AFT had a seat on the council When however he voted against enhanced education funding in favor of Cold War measures like the B 1 bomber Shanker insisted that he was elected by all the members of the AFL CIO convention and obliged therefore to vote against teachers when approval of defense appropriations was at issue Shanker died in 1997 Hobart retired as president of NYSUT in April 2005 He was succeeded by Richard Ianuzzi NYSUT second vice president and a member of NYSUT s board of directors In April 2014 Karen Magee was elected NYSUT president Political activity EditPolitically 1973 was a pivotal year for NYSUT The union adopted UTNY s Committee of 100 program a group of many more than 100 members who agreed to lobby the state legislature in person twice each year In 1967 NYSUT had created its own political action committee VOTE COPE which was also melded into NYSUT In 2005 the Committee of 100 counted several thousand members and VOTE COPE raised more than 3 million in voluntary contributions Over the years NYSUT s political activism has led it to be characterized as the 800 pound gorilla of New York politics Some of the union s accomplishments include In 1975 passage of a law guaranteeing tenure transfer rights and a maximum two year probation period for teachers who switched districts In 1976 a legislative override of a veto of a bill requiring a formula for average funding of New York City public schools it was the first override of a governor s veto in 104 years In 1977 a law providing for significantly enhanced enforcement powers for the state Public Employment Relations Board and In 1978 repeal of the Taylor Law s mandatory penalty of one year s probation for any public employee who went on strike NYSUT continued to expand collective bargaining rights for teachers as well In 1981 the union won passage of a law granting collective bargaining rights for substitute teachers In 1982 the state legislature passed the Triborough Amendment to the Taylor Law Many school districts ceased to honor clauses they disliked in expired teacher union contracts which led many locals to strike The Triborough Amendment required school districts to honor the entire contract until a new agreement was reached and the number of strikes fell drastically Professional development also became a concern In 1984 NYSUT successfully pushed for passage of a state law creating and funding centers where teachers could obtain continuing education In 1986 the union won passage of a bill creating mandatory mentor intern programs in schools so that established teachers would be able to mentor student teachers during their internships in the public schools Retirement issues also came to the fore NYSUT established a retiree division in 1976 In 1985 the state legislature passed a bill providing for full retirement benefits for any teacher aged 55 who had taught for at least 30 years A year later the union won passage of a bill giving school paraprofessionals a full year s retirement credit 12 months for working a full 10 month school year For the 2012 New York s 18th congressional district the NYSUT endorsed Democrat Sean Patrick Maloney 3 2006 merger with NEA EditOn May 5 2006 NYSUT voted to merge with the NEA NY the renamed NYEA The 35 000 member NYEA had approved the merger agreement on April 29 2006 4 The merger became effective on September 1 2006 and the newly merged union is now jointly affiliated with both the NEA and AFT The AFT has long sought merger with the NEA on a national level But acrimonious relationships between the two unions on the local level and AFT s insistence on what NEA and its affiliates consider undemocratic practices and AFT s insistence upon affiliation with the AFL CIO are significant obstacles Among AFT s undemocratic practices are its abolition of the secret ballot its requirement that delegates to its convention vote for officers by roll call ballot identifying their choices and their names in writing The two unions have continued to work together however After the failed merger attempt the unions formed the NEAFT Partnership to encourage joint policies on education federal funding for public schools and lobbying The unions also agreed to support local and state level mergers where appropriate Three other states have merged AFT NEA affiliates Florida Minnesota and Montana Among local mergers is that in Wichita Kansas long a battleground for the two national unions and Los Angeles Combined the merged units represent 197 000 members The NEA has 2 7 million members the AFT 1 7 million With the NYSUT merger 681 000 members of the AFT or about 52 percent now belong to NEA See also EditNew York City Teachers Union 1916 1964 References Edit a b US Department of Labor Office of Labor Management Standards File number 070 581 Report submitted November 25 2014 a b US Department of Labor Office of Labor Management Standards File number 070 581 Search Democrat Sean Patrick Maloney Racks Up Nods From NYS AFL CIO And NYSUT In NY 18 Bid NY Daily News 2012 06 08 Retrieved 2012 10 04 NEA NY delegates vote to unite organization with New York State United Teachers April 29 2006 NYSUT A Union of Professionals www nysut org Archived from the original on 2007 09 27 Further reading EditBerube Maurice R Teacher Politics The Influence of Unions Vol 26 Westport Conn Greenwood Publishing Group 1988 ISBN 0 313 25685 3 Braun Robert J Teachers and Power The Story of the American Federation of Teachers New York Simon amp Schuster 1972 ISBN 0 671 21167 6 Eaton William Edward The American Federation of Teachers 1916 1961 A History of the Movement Urbana IL Southern Illinois University Press 1975 ISBN 0 8093 0708 1 Gaffney Dennis Teachers United The Rise of New York State United Teachers Albany N Y State University of New York Press 2007 ISBN 0 7914 7191 8 Gordon Jane Anna Why They Couldn t Wait A Critique of the Black Jewish Conflict Over Community Control in Ocean Hill Brownsville 1967 1971 Oxford RoutledgeFalmer 2001 ISBN 0 415 92910 5 Podair Jerald The Strike That Changed New York Blacks Whites and the Ocean Hill Brownsville Crisis New Haven Yale University Press 2003 ISBN 0 300 08122 7External links Edit Organized labour portal Wikimedia Commons has media related to New York State United Teachers Official website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title New York State United Teachers amp oldid 1127522609, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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