Tuesday, December 10, 2024

UFT Caucuses: When to Hold and When to Fold, UFT Members Assembly - The ABCs of Better Pay

I agree (Union Activists - Are We Weird?. )  Prioritizing building an all-inclusive coalition is a losing game. We've seen where that goes and the fact that UFC evaporated shortly after the last election is all the evidence that anyone needs to know that these types of marriage of convenience strategies aren't built for long term organizing. How many UFC officer candidates left the DOE post election? This pattern of squabbling between elections and trying to come together last min is a real bummer.... Anon. comment on Ed Notes
A very incisive comment from someone who seems to be on the inside. And after the public service announcement below I will delve into the 50 year failures of election coalitions in the UFT - believe me I know. I helped put them together multiple times, only to see the coalitions come apart for years before they awaken like a bear out of hibernation to redo the same old thing once again when the election bell rings, the so-called Einstein def of insanity. Or the Pavlov dogs of the UFT. 
 
The current caucus structure even with one slate can't win - and if they did imagine each caucus doing what they always do - retreating to their corners to use their position to build their caucus so the next time they could ice everyone else out to try to win the whole thing for themselves. MORE is in a much better position than NAC to do that. After the 2022 election all pleas to MORE to keep meeting were ignored. It took most of the year for the break with New Action on the exec bd to come. MORE sits as far away as they could from NAC. (maybe now they will sit together to show a united front while they  gnash their teeth. So imagine this shot gun alliance now. Just like UFC the day after the election, win or lose, infighting and positioning will start. It's in their DNA. Only RA doesn't have to do that because a) it's an oligarchy and b) they have no competition from another caucus so they can act with impunity.

 
There's still time to register for today's ABC Member Meetup zoom.

We’re excited to invite you to an important UFT Members Assembly: "The ABCs of Pay: Let's Talk!". In this Zoom meeting, we will dive into one of the most pressing issues for educators - fair compensation.

Surveys show fair compensation is the leading issue for UFT members. This meet-up will focus on the nuances of pattern bargaining and how to break it, plus other ideas on how to increase compensation. Within two hours of posting this meeting, 100 people signed up. You can't run in an election calling for better compensation without an actual plan on how to win that and developing a strategy that differs from the Unity strategies. Explore the options and compare to how the current leadership approaches the issue - Hands up, surrender to the pattern. What is the Municipal Labor Committee and how do we break its stranglehold on pattern bargaining?

RSVP, Tuesday 12/10 @7PM: UFT Members Assembly - The ABCs of Better Pay

Date: Tuesday, December 10, 2024
Time: 7-8 PM
Location: Zoom [rsvp.uftmembers.org]

RSVP: 12/10 Member Assembly

 
Future meetups will focus on other issues. Tent Date for next one on How to win changes in Tier 6 is Jan. 7.


Tuesday, Dec. 10, 2024
 
UFT Caucuses: When to Hold and When to Fold
 
UFT Caucuses come and go - except for Unity. And there are some signs of lower level desertions.
 
Here's a little history of UFT oppo groups, over 55 years of observance where in most elections coalitions were built and ended the day after the elections.
 
My 1970s caucus, Coalition of NYC School Workers, was extremely active for a decade and was a one-third component of the New Action Coalition, a united front of 3 caucuses that came together every two years to run in UFT elections from late 70s through early 90s and then went their own ways between elections, often competing with each other for a scarcity of activists. The other two caucuses were New Directions (founded in 1976) and Teachers Action Caucus (c.1968) and merged c.1995. This pattern, while eventually winning some exec bd seats, which often seemed the sole purpose of running, made no progress in building a serious caucus to challenge Unity, a consistent fatal flaw.
 
The School Worker Coalition's key organizers began to lose interest in the early 80s - I bought a house in 1979 and began an MA in computer science and taught at Brooklyn College that took up the rest of the 80s into the early 90s. We didn't try to breathe life into a dying caucus corpse. The core stayed together and began to meet and eat socially - which those of us still alive still do. The main organizing we did was menus. But we continued to talk about the major issues and stayed informed. Discussions still ran deep and incisive and when I re-emerged those talks gave me a base with which to organize in my own school.

I came back to life in the UFT in 1994 when I became chapter leader, but my focus was on my school and district where I had to battle a principal and try to woo a district and local union leadership that had viewed me as an enemy in the 70s - and I was fairly successful in neutralizing them since they knew I could still be a problem for them if I did exposes. I did not have much time to do central UFT work other than go to the DA.

Not until 1997 when I was no longer teaching and working at the district did I have time and energy to do central union organizing work with the debut of Ed Notes, the newsletter. But I was a lone wolf in a sea of caucuses. I relished the freedom but understood you need a caucus to move the ball. The lone wolf phase lasted through 2003 when NAC sold out to Unity and I helped found ICE, not a caucus loaded with limits or norms (except me) in response. 
 
New Action was composed of the other two wings of the original election New Action Coalition that functioned from 1979-1995, TAC and ND.

TAC and ND continued as separate active caucuses through the 80s and early 90s. The original coalition, not the caucus New Action but the coalition of caucuses, began to win the high schools and the biggie came in 1985 with winning the HSVP and then 1991 winning the 13 HS and MS exec bd. But they lost it all in 1993 which opened Unity to taking away the right for divisions to choose their own VPs.

Then came the 1995 contract battle and the voting it down, led by TAC, ND and independents. (I played little part in that for reasons I can't remember.) Apparently talks for a merger of TAC and ND had been going on and that led to the current edition of New Action - New for ND and Action for TAC. Both groups knew it was time to fold into something new and it worked, attracting people like James and the future Camille Eterno. And Lisa North. So TAC and ND folded for something better - more big tent than either ND or TAC (which was considered the left at the time.)

There were other caucuses called PAC - Progressive Action Caucus. c. 1997. They were focused on teacher who were having trouble passing the license exams and they existed through the 2004 elections when they ran with ICE. They had a big court case and when that was lost they folded -- but funny thing they recently won on appeal 2 decades later.

And Teachers for a Just Contract (TJC) which was founded in 1992 but didn't participate in UFT elections until 2004. More on them later.

Now let's leap ahead to ICE - Independent Community of Educators -  which came out of a meeting I called on Halloween 2003. We attracted those who quit New Action like the Eternos, Ellen Fox and Lisa North plus very newly active UFTers like Jeff Kaufman and Julie Woodward, but also what was left of the core people from the old 70s School Workers Caucus. I was impressed by how many independents there were who were not interested in New Action, PAC or TJC and were looking for something that ICE seemed to offer - an Independent point of view freed from caucus hierarchies. And I will say, ICE has never had hierarchies.
 
This combination in ICE proved dynamic - for a few years. And then it wasn't after the 2007 election when we clearly began to shrink. Meetings of 50 went down to 12. While others persisted I read the cards. We had no real future as a traditional caucus but could continue in some ways to have influence in the UFT, even today. Despite my reluctance we gave it one more try in the 2010 elections, when we ran with TJC. It was time to fold as a traditional caucus after that, to the consternation of people like the late James Eterno and Ellen Fox.

Oh, TJC - Teachers for a Just Contract. They were around since the 90s but came to life as a caucus for the 2004 elections when ICE and TJC ran separate slates except for the high schools where we ran the same candidates and won. BTW - a formula for running two slates in the coming up election with enough candidates on both slates to win a majority of exec bd and ad com. A possible solution to settle differences. But leave that for another time. The older ICE socialists were very much opposed to the TJC version of socialism and  I would say ICE formed as much to stop TJC from representing the opposition. ICE was a bullwark to both NAC and TJC. To say TJC was pissed is putting it likely. They viewed ICE like ABC is viewed by the legacy oppo today.

TJC was the hot, younger thing then while ICE leaned older. So they may have had legs but also faded when the younger International Socialists (ISO) abandoned the older socialist Solidarity segment and by the 2010 election they could only field a relatively small number of candidates. It was clear that both ICE and TJC had no future.

In 2009, some of us in ICE founded a new non-caucus group called GEM - Grassroots Education Movement - a group that had no intention of running in UFT elections but was an advocacy group for public education. GEM attracted new people not interested in UFT politics and, unencumbered by the burden of trying to build a caucus, GEM took off like a rocket - we accomplished more in a 2-3 year period than any caucus I've seen - totally focused, not on positioning, but united on key issues. Even parents were involved. GEM had legs but we got waylaid.

Then came the 2010 Chicago victory of CORE, a caucus founded only two years before as a union study group. Suddenly some eyes in GEM lit up - we need a CORE in the UFT - and that folded GEM, sadly, and all groups linked to the UFT were invited to discussions of what became MORE - Movement of Rank and File Educators. I was involved in choosing that name - I always wanted to see the word Educators or workers in group names.

The day of MORE's first big meeting, TJC folded, but ICE people were a major presence in the founding of MORE. And don't think many ICEers weren't reluctant. Gloria, Lisa and I led the push for ICE to give up our autonomy and veto power as we entered MORE. James Eterno was a skeptic. The recently passed Ellen Fox never failed to remind me she opposed ICE giving up autonomy. She wanted to see MORE as a coalition of groups instead of a caucus. Sadly, I now think she was right.

But as MORE grew, ICE continued to function -- at times were accused by some in MORE of functioning as a caucus within a caucus which was LOL since we are the most undisciplined group of anarcho-socialists. Rice pudding over politics. One thing I learned in MORE was there were highly disciplined factions in MORE that did operate semi-undercover as a caucus within a caucus and were using MORE to recruit for their own outside groups. 
 
In 2014 a segment of MORE split off to form Solidarity Caucus, which is still around today. Solidarity was very dependent on the leadership of Francesco Porteles and Lydia Howrilka and when they left Solidarity has floundered. After MORE/NA won the 2016 hs seats (where they functioned fairly well together despite MORE steering attempts to interfere and "steer" the exec bd, to no avail - which led to the future troubles and the purging of ICE. 

So, I gave you a history of most UFT caucuses (I'm leaving out Retiree Advocate for now) and how they merged or folded or became something other than a caucus. 
 
The conclusion: I'm clearly not opposed to caucuses. I do push back against caucuses when I consider them fundamentally ineffective. Ed Notes once rated a caucus as A caucus in Need of Improvement. I reserve the right to be critical of caucuses  - some for external policies, but also for those with clunky over burdened internal process that bog them down in minutia and too many rules and norms - I hate norms.

I can only say my best experience in caucuses and uncaucuses had been when there is dynamic conversations on issues of concern to NYC educators -- while some caucuses spend a lot to time talking about themselves. 

So far my ABC non-caucus experience has been much more of the dynamic conversations with ideas flowing freely. I care more about that process at this point then imposing a formal structure on the UFT election process. 


Saturday, December 7, 2024

Union Activists - Are We Weird?

Activists engaged in union activities can come off to colleagues as Just Another Politician weather representing Unity or an oppo caucus.
 
Saturday, Dec. 7, 2024
 
A friend, who has been an active UFT member as a chapter leader and member of Unity Caucus told me a story recently. We were at some big rally the union was running about a dozen years ago against closing schools and I was racing around handing out leaflets and doing video. He was standing with a top union official, who gave him some advise: "You don't want to end up like that guy," he said pointing to me. He pitied me for his perception of my not having a life (he often told me when he saw me I should relax and get a life). 
 
And sure enough, the minute that guy retired he disappeared from UFT activity. I actually pitied him. He seemed miserable at times working full-time for the union while I was having a blast. But he was correct in that people like me may not be viewed as being normal by the average UFT member. 

Now we know that just being a chapter leader and a teacher is an enormous responsibility plus family and other activities. I was only CL for 4 years, the last one on sabbatical but they were very intense years and I prioritized running the chapter in ways that raised the level of union awareness in my school plus having bagels and a schmear at chapter meetings didn't hurt. I took a proactive role and reported on every meeting I attended: Consultation with principal, District, Local School Board, Del. Ass, and assorted other meetings. I was one busy fella - imagine if I was also organizing within a caucus -- more meetings and maybe some naval gazing where we talk a lot about ourselves. I was in a caucus at meetings where I didn't hear one word about anyone's school and what was going on there.
 
The 90s-2003 were years when I had no connection to a caucus but if I had been active with a caucus I don't know if I would have been as effective in my school. I didn't really become active in the union as an independent until after my sabbatical in '97 when I was given a tech support job at the district and no longer had to teach and be chapter leader. Only then could I focus on central UFT issues which led to Ed Notes.
 
Imagine a super active UFT Caucus member in that position. And I don't exclude many Unity CL since they also push their caucus under the guise of the union leadership?
 
Do their colleagues view them as "the other," like that UFT official viewed me? I think being so active puts us in a certain mind-set that separates us from the very people we are trying to organize. A tendency to talk at, not with people. They are always trying to sell something. They have a dog in the race.
 
At a recent zoom with independent, but heavy duty, union activists there were a few new faces who are chapter leaders and delegates in their schools, aware of what is going on in the union, but so far as observers. They brought a breath of fresh air to give us a realistic picture of what the average UFT members are thinking in their schools. Sometimes the activist brain suffers separation.
 
I think we think different. We are sort of trying to sell something that most of our colleagues are not interested in.

Looking back I realize how I must have seemed to my colleagues, but lucky for me I'm super social and took part in all school social activities -- I was close to what I call "the social activists" who partied. It took me many years to become comfortable and feel part of the crew, so my I was comfortable in the daily normal activities, never heavy handed. And when I became CL despite the principal's opposition, they rose to back me which put her in more isolation than me.

So my lesson of the day to all my fellow weirdo activists -- do your political thing but when the social center of the school (people who really control the agenda) party, party hardy comes first. If you miss a big school social event to go to some rally, you need to chill in order to win the hearts and minds of your colleagues.


Friday, December 6, 2024

RSVP, Tuesday 12/10 @7PM: UFT Members Assembly - The ABCs of Better Pay

Friday, Dec. 6, 2024

Come on down and join -- let's see what kind of interest there is in these elections. If there's not we should re-evaluate things.


rsvp.uftmembers.org

 

Hello, union family!

We’re excited to invite you to an important UFT Members Assembly: "The ABCs of Pay: Let's Talk!". In this Zoom meeting, we will dive into one of the most pressing issues for educators - fair compensation.

Date: Tuesday, December 10, 2024
Time: 7-8 PM
Location: Zoom [rsvp.uftmembers.org]

RSVP: 12/10 Member Assembly


This is more than a meeting – it’s an opportunity to come together, share our experiences, and organize for meaningful change.

We’ll discuss:

- How current pay practices affect educators and our schools

- Strategies to push for improved compensation and conditions.

- Ways to strengthen our union through member-led action.

We will also share the feedback you all gave us about our tentative platform for A BETTER CONTRACT.

Lastly, we will announce the upcoming meeting dates for our various subcommittees/work groups. It's time to roll up our sleeves for the transformative change we seek.


Why This Matters:

75% of our members don’t vote in union elections, but we believe that by coming together and focusing on issues like pay, we can build a movement that speaks to our concerns. Whether you’re a long-time educator, retiree or new to the profession, your voice and perspective are vital.


How You Can Help:

1. Attend the meeting – Your input matters!

2. Spread the word – Share this email or invite a colleague who cares about pay and fair working conditions.

Get involvedJoin our efforts to create a stronger, more member-driven union. [join.uftmembers.org]

Let’s make this assembly a turning point for our union and our profession.

If you have any questions or need more details, feel free to reach out at: info@uftmembers.org

Together, we can ensure our union fights for what truly matters -- us, our families and our school communities.




Finally, please take a moment to check out our landing page to see how you can get involved: http://uftmembers.org

Stay updated at: http://abettercontract.org

And follow us at:


In solidarity,

Katie Anskat, Queens Metropolitan HS Delegate
katieharten@gmail.com

Paul Egan, PS/MS 194 Chapter Leader
Egan10980@gmail.com

Chad Hamilton P.S. K231 Chapter Leader
chadhamilton231@gmail.com

Steve Swieciki, Lehman High School Chapter Leader
uft.swieciki@gmail.com


Thanks for reading A BETTER CONTRACT - UFT MEMBERS! This post is public so feel free to share it.

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The Caucus Conundrum

I've been accused of many things. The latest is that I am anti-caucus, which is interesting since I helped found 3 in the UFT. I've seen the good, the bad and the ugly. 
 
Don't get me wrong. 
 
There is a need for caucuses given the way the Unity Caucus has controlled for 6 decades and ideally there would be one big-tent caucus to face down Unity, but in the vast UFT, there has rarely, if ever, been only one oppo caucus. Thus, when UFT elections come upon us every 3 years, the various caucuses enter long negotiations, a tooth-like extraction
process.

The problem for those of us who have been in caucuses, we often forget we are a tiny sliver - 1% at most of a general UFT membership - the 99% - many who have no idea what a caucus is - not even Unity. If you are in a school, go ahead and take a survey of your colleagues. 
 
This year I have soured on the caucus control of elections because I think a takeover of the UFT involves going beyond the caucus constituencies and making a serious dent in the non-caucus 99%, 80% who don't vote. 
 
Someone at a meeting recently pointed out there are concentric circles of activism, with the caucus people being on the inner ring. He made a cogent comment that there are next levels  of people who are informed on UFT politics but not actively engaged in oppo politics. Many of them are non-aligned chapter leaders and delegates who don't want to be in a caucus. If they are looking to be more active, they have nowhere to go except a caucus. I know people who checked out all the caucus options and passed. A strong independent streak does not always mesh. And caucuses don't want people who might prove contentious. (My hand is up.)
 
That was the position I found myself in 1994 when I became CL of my school. I felt I had nowhere to land and it was frustrating to act as a lone wolf. So I started Ed Notes and attracted a following that eventually led to forming the ICE caucus in 2003. But underlying that caucus was no rule or norms (except me) and an attempt to create space for independent people. Compared to other caucuses, I've felt more comfortable with ICE people who like to talk and eat and eat and talk.

Thursday, November 28, 2024

UFT Election Committee Sets Election Dates, Drops Non-Profit AAA for Wall St. Holding Company, Queens HS Dist Rep blog - LOL

Did a desperate Unity leadership hire a fly by night Wall St Holding company to run the UFT election?
 
See The Wire for a more comprehensive look.
 
NEW DATA: Friday Nov. 29:


Does it surprise you that the UFT/Unity leadership, tied to the corporate/donor class controlled Democratic Party, a leadership that tried to shift us from non-profit Medicare to corporate controlled MedAdv, would go the same route for an inexperienced, in debt, for profit for this crucial UFT election? And the data of every UFT member will be in the hands of this company. 
Who do you trust to help Unity cheat? The longstanding, respected non-profit American Arbitration Association or a Wall Street holding company.... Comment 
What - me worry?

Unity blamed AAA for sending out the Unity retiree flyer instead of the Unity para flyer with the Para ballot. Fix Para Pay ended up with 75% of the vote. It couldn't be due to the poor para pay that they won. Unity blames the AAA for sending out the wrong flyer when the story is the Unity hierarchy made the mistake in giving the AAA the wrong flyer. This is a pretty flimsy excuse but we sat there and were helpless to oppose or knew what questions to ask. Someone should go to the next UFT Exec Bd meeting and raise questions.
 
UFT Election committee did not review the RFPs but were told by the Election Committee Chair that a selection had already been made. It will be rubber stamped at next UFT exec board meeting. This process might cause problems. GES was used by a DC 37 local to run a controversial rerun election … there was a complaint that they were not legally hired. The complaint was dismissed because the arbitrator said that the RFPs were brought to the election committee and exec board.

In our case, the RFPs were NOT brought to the election committee or the exec bd.

Thanks to Daniel Alicea for the in-depth research. See his tweet down below.

AAA OUT:

 
The other story is Unity opposes electronic voting because they don't want more people to vote -- you know, the 80% of in-service people who don't vote. They are viewed as a threat. In the past Unity could rely on the 40% return of retirees. Now what? I pointed this out at the meeting - since Unity can no longer rely on retiree votes their best chance in the election is to increase in-service. Did I detect a note of panic on some faces?
 
Happy Thanksgiving - November 28, 2024
 
I attended the UFT Election meeting Tuesday along with 6 other oppo reps and and double the gaggle of Unity reps, all on the clock 'till 6. They made sure the meeting ended by 5:30 despite my best attempts. I rate the snacks, other than the fruit cups, as low-grade. How about a sandwich?
 
We raised a number of issues at the meeting but first here is the skinny on the dates, all to be ratified at the next UFT Exec Bd meeting.
  • Ballots mailed May 1, 2025, counted May 29.
  • Petitions available at the Feb.12 DA and must be returned by Monday, March 17 - wait, isn't that St. Patrick's Day? I hope the returnees don't make a pit stop on the way in with petitions. They added a requirement that every candidate must sign their name to every petition their name is on.
Boy am I glad I won't be involved with petitions this year. In 2021 I devoted almost 2 months of my life to the petition campaign. My basement was covered with petitions folders. This year I'm doing jigsaw puzzles in the basement.

The BIG News: AAA out, GES in to manage election
The big news is that the UFT is dropping the AAA and using a new vendor, GES - Global Election Services. That should be a fun experiment. They used a mistake by AAA in not sending out election materials for a para candidate as the reason and inside baseball people said the error was due to a higher up in the Unity chain. A flimsy reason and a suspect replacement? Why am I not confident? Imagine the oppo wins and Unity calls for another election due to "irregularities"?
 
Does this change meet the sniff test? 
 
See below for some GES history, only 9 years old. AAA is tied to hundreds of certified arbitrators…GES has far from a similar record. 
 
Does it surprise you that the corporate tinged tied to donor class of the Dem party would shift to a Wall St controlled company?
 
The shift to GES slipped by us as we had no real information, not that we could have stopped it. If we came up with all this data below at the meeting, every Unity clone would have voted us down. 
 
Candidate debate, protections for those stuffing mail boxes
At the meeting John Lawhead repping Solidarity,  raised the idea of a candidate debate and referred to the debates Randi held in 1999 and 2001 elections, where she did not fare very well. Maybe why they canceled them.
 
Bobby Greenberg (RA rep) pushed for increased protection for those who stuff mailboxes, not only from principals but from chapter leaders. Stuffing boxes is another chore I won't be doing this time because I believe it does little good in getting out the vote - though I did get sucked into doing it last time. Bobby also wants the oppo reps to have the same access as LeRoy who double dips as UFT and Unity when he talked to AAA in past elections without us being there.

Christina Gavin (EONYC Rep), who filed a 70 page complaint last time, pushed on the idea of UFT officials using time on clock to engage in campaigning. 

I revisited the push I made 3 years ago for school data on turnout rates, pointing to the low turnout deserts and how the union would benefit from this info - last time Unity turned that down but did go for district results (UFT Election 2022 Results - Districts).

I pushed hard for an electronic voting option but naturally there are loads of roadblocks. This time they came up with the constitution wrinkle - some language in the constitution that says you have to use written ballots. Christina Gavin pointed out that written can also mean electronic.

Anyway, I pointed out the low vote totals for previous elections and handed out the ugly story on a chart. Like less than 20% of actives voted while 40% of retirees votes. After all the reasons we couldn't do electronic voting were pointed out I said I had raised this same reso 3 years ago and they promised to look into the issue but did nothing so we are back to ground zero.
 
I also pointed out that in previous elections the leadership could count on the retiree vote to carry them through, now with that vote in potential jeopardy, the leadership should want very much to increase in-service vote for their own protection. But don't expect any creative ideas to come from the moribund leadership. They looked like turtles turned on their backs. 

The best they could come up with was Queens District Rep James Vasquez with a reso to form a task force to "study" the issue. He also placed blame on the oppo people over the past 3 years for not bringing up the issue during that time. Duhhhh, James -- we know you guys never want electronic voting and you will forget all about your task force.

But Vasquez did not lose the opportunity to put out a dumb blog post attacking the opposition and blaming them for his own party's failures. That attack can be termed, "I'm scared shit we will lose and I will have to go back to the classroom and teach a full load instead of my one or two periods a day - and lose my second pension." 

Arthur will address the story on Friday and I will chip in a separate post in case Arthur misses something.

But here are a few comments on the Vasquez post from the RA listserve:
Ill-informed. The NLRB doesn’t even oversee UFT.
Hohohohohohoho! This is too rich for words!
Among the gems: 
"Back in 2021, members of the MORE, ICE, New Action, Solidarity and Retiree Advocate caucuses proposed and voted for a motion for the Election Committee to add the word "electronic" to the election notice....These caucuses decided to take no action on this issue whatsoever over the past three years. This pattern of inaction has become all too familiar. These groups prioritize their political gain over the well-being" of UFT members

The caucuses were supposed to take action?  I thought resolutions passed at the Delegate Assembly were instructions for the UFT leadership to take action! If this comment on their part were not so stupid, it would be pathetic. Ok, so it's both.  What actually galls me is that Unity in their broadside below is trying to get out from under the pressure that is building currently and historically underway to move to a more modern and more easily accessible voting system being proposed by opposition groups.

They acknowledge that it was already proposed in 2021 and they didn't do a thing about it. Now they are suddenly waking up, in light of their defeat in the Retiree election, and realizing that they need to actually do something about demands they thought previously they could discount and ignore. And they blame the very groups that brought this matter up for their inaction!

 So after 3 years of inertia , they now insist that decisions about the feasibility of such a system are still years away. What happened to the 3 years they decided to waste? 

And Unity still has the chutzpah to declare, essentially, "Well, let's not be hasty!"Retired Sheila
James Vasquez calls us irresponsible for asking for electronic voting. He certainly didn't  say that to our faces at the Election meeting.
 
Background on GES

John S. Matthews
Chairman of GES from its inception in 2015, where he has supervised the development of elections software and hardware applications covering registration, tabulation and reporting.

 
John S.
Matthews
is currently the Chairman, CEO, CFO & Controller at Global Arena Holding, Inc. since 2016. He is also the Chairman at Global Election Services, Inc. since 2015, the Director at GAHI Acquisition Corp. since 2015, and the Director at Tidewater Energy Group, Inc. since 2019. In the past, Mr. Matthews served as the Chairman & Chief Executive Officer at Weatherly Securities Corp. from 1996 to 2000. He was also the Chief Executive Officer & Director at China Stationery & Office Supply, Inc. from 2010 to 2011, the Chairman & Chief Executive Officer at Global Arena Capital Corp. from 2007 to 2014, the Chairman at JSM Capital Holding Corp. in 2003, the Chairman at Ehrenkranz King Nussbaum from 2001 to 2003, and the President at Clark Dodge & Co., Inc. in 2006.
 
Parent company is partially owned by Bacardi:
 
What’s the biggest election GES has handled … even if mail-in ballots?
 
Lots of chatter in this forum about him being a scammer:
 
From SEC filing about the parent company:
The Company has generated recurring losses from operations and cash flow deficits from its operations since inception and has had to continually borrow to continue operating. In addition, certain of the Company’s debt is in default as of December 31, 2022. These factors raise substantial doubt about the Company’s ability to continue as a going concern. The continued operations of the Company are dependent upon its ability to raise additional capital, obtain additional financing and/or acquire or develop a business that generates sufficient positive cash flows from operations. The Company continues to raise funds from the issuance of additional convertible promissory note. Management is hopeful that with their ability to raise additional funds that the Company should be able to continue as a going concern.

A holding company:
 
 

 
Do you trust your data with this guy:
 
 


 
Read through to the end for Daniel's tweets for more.

EONYC Tweet on GES:

Emerging Election Scandal —  
 
This past Tuesday @UFTUnity used its outsized power on the @UFT election committee to say that they were changing vendors for the monitoring and election balloting of the UFT’s 2025 citywide election.  This came as a surprise to many union insiders as for years non-profit arbitration stalwart @ADRorg AAA has monitored their elections as they for most of the major NYC unions. 
 
They announced that a 9 year old Wall Street holding company, General Election Services, Inc would now be in charge of the mail in balloting process for the UFT’s  nearly 200k members. There was talk that @UFTUnity was upset with AAA for allegedly messing up the para chapter election when a Unity caucus retiree flyer was sent out with the mail-in ballots, instead of their Unity para flyer. 
 
Fix Para Pay, the opponent caucus’ flyer was mailed out and we all know that FPP trounced Unity garnering 75% of the vote. They announced that a 9 year old Wall Street holding company, General Election Services, Inc would now be in charge of the mail in balloting process for the UFT’s  nearly 200k members. 
 
There was talk at the Tuesday election committee meeting that @UFTUnity was upset with AAA for allegedly messing up the para chapter election when a Unity caucus retiree flyer was sent out with the mail-in ballots, instead of their Unity para flyer. 
 
Fix Para Pay, the opponent caucus’ flyer was mailed out and we all know that FPP trounced Unity garnering 75% of the vote. It’s unclear if the snafu was AAA’s or a mistake by the Unity caucus leader and UFT secretary, LeRoy Barr
 
So who is General Election Services and their chairman, John S. Matthews? … take a look at their shady website, first.  Then their parent company’s, Global Arena Holding Inc, SEC history. Deep dive incoming---

General Election Services has limited experience in running mostly paper ballot elections for organizations, owned by Global Arena Holding, Inc. It claims 40 years “combined experience” in elections, the truth it’s been around since 2015...  

The GES chairman is John S Matthews, who has a controlling interest in several other companies, including its parent company, Global Arena Holding Inc. GES and Global Arena board of shareholders includes Barcadi owner, Facundo Bacardi and former NBA player, Kiki VanDeWeghe. Matthews has been fined and suspended from in the past for his past business dealings: “John S. Matthews of New York, New York, the former owner of Global Arena Capital Corporation, was fined $25,000 and suspended for six months from association with any Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA) member after consenting to findings that he engaged in unauthorized private securities transactions.” And the 2022 SEC filing for the parent company and related holdings sounds an alarm about the viability of this entire enterprise: The accompanying consolidated financial statements have been prepared in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America, which contemplates the continuation of the Company as a going concern. The Company has generated recurring losses from operations and cash flow deficits from its operations since inception and has had to continually borrow to continue operating. In addition, certain of the Company’s debt is in default as of December 31, 2022. These factors raise substantial doubt about the Company’s ability to continue as a going concern. The continued operations of the Company are dependent upon its ability to raise additional capital, obtain additional financing and/or acquire or develop a business that generates sufficient positive cash flows from operations. The Company continues to raise funds from the issuance of additional convertible promissory note. Management is hopeful that with their ability to raise additional funds that the Company should be able to continue as a going concern.”

GES’ claim to fame is handling the logistics 2020 North Dakota democratic primary election in which on 14k North Dakotans voted. It’s unclear if GES has ever handled a union election for over 200k members with its hundreds of candidates, like the
Who should UFT members trust more to handle a fair and honest election…? 1. AAA — The not-for-profit American Arbitration Association® (AAA®)-International Centre for Dispute Resolution® (ICDR®) who is the largest private global provider of alternative dispute resolution (ADR) services in the world. Whose arbitrators and reputation are legal experts. 2. A fly by night Wall Street holding company that is in default for debt? wants us to trust them to entrust GES and Global Arena. Bizarre.
 

Wednesday, November 27, 2024

ICE Zoomed, ICE Talked, ICE Talked and Kept Talking and Talking and Talking

 
ICE meetings keep going until no one has anything left to say.
Tuesday, November 26, 2024

ICE met on a Sunday night zoom by notifying the members of the ICE listserve. I'm extremely proud of the 21 years of ICE and the quality people it has attracted. The meeting reflected that.

As always, the company at an ICE meeting is comforting. We had old hands from the first days and some new people. The discussion was open and at times invigorating. There was disagreement - intelligent disagreement and everyone had a say, as often as they needed. 
 
We began by reminiscing about Ellen Fox and Lisa North, two ICE founders. Lisa was low key and so was Ellen - on the surface. But she often came up with with some dingers, which I won't repeat to save some people from being embarrassed.
 
Then we went around the zoom asking people to say a few words - we heard many UFT activism origin stories. I was proud that Ed Notes and myself were mentioned so often as the "connector." That segment took over a half hour and not everyone wanted to speak. We used to start in person ICE meetings with a go-around where we all got a perspective and snapshot of the current situation in schools.
 
UFT Elections
The main topic was the UFT elections and people were updated on the latest developments.

What about the turnout in the 2022 UFT election where less than 20% of in-service people voted? Holy crap, the Don't Give a Crap Caucus makes up 80% of the in service electorate? Untapped by the 7 caucuses and groups running under United For Change in 2022? 
 
Do we think a severely reduced UFC could do better this time? There was general skepticism that doing the same old, same old would make much difference. Of course the retiree vote (40% voted in 2022) is a wild card.
 
The outcome of the discussion was that an attempt will be made to write a statement for the ICE blog expressing the sentiments at the meeting. 
 
 
Congestion Pricing
We ended with an interesting deep dive on congestion pricing based on Jeff Kaufman's post on the ICE blog: Out of Touch and Out of Time: Why Mulgrew’s Fight Against Congestion Pricing Fails Teachers and the Working Class.
 
Jeff, a serious bike rider was surprised at the push back but also made a cogent defense. As usual despite disagreement, with everyone getting a chance to make their case, the meeting ended after 2 hours. We must do it again soon. Join the ICE listserve if you are interested.


Sunday, November 24, 2024

The Passing of Giants: ICE founders And RA Organizers Ellen Fox and Lisa North

I heard from Ellen Fox's daughter this morning that Ellen passed away on Friday, just two weeks after learning about the passing of Lisa North from Alzeimers. Lisa and Ellen were both core members of the Retiree Advocate organizing committee and joined along with me and Gloria Brandman around 2016. Lisa, who was the RA chapter leader candidate in the 2018 chapter election, hadn't been able to participate over the past few years, but she was a key player, especially as an expert educator with Bank St training, a stalwart in the anti-testing movement and. popular with everyone.

Ellen was an active RA member until about 6 weeks ago when we began to lose touch and she said it was due to phone and computer problems. Notorious for going to be in the middle of the night, she used me as her alarm clock to wake her up for our 10AM meetings. Over the past week my phone calls would not go through so Sheila from RA who lives nearby went to the apartment on Tuesday to check and a neighbor said she was in the hospital.

Both Ellen and Lisa had been in New Action from its earliest days in the mid-90s along with the late James Eterno and his wife Camille but left when the leadership made a deal with Randi to support Unity in the 2004 elections and became part of the founding ICE meeting in late October 2003. Think of it: James, Lisa and Ellen lost over the past year.

Ellen has left a giant oppo footprint in the UFT. A member of Teachers Action Caucus from its early days and through their merger with New Directions in 1995 to form New Action, Ellen was elected to the UFT Exec Bd as a HS rep on the NA slate in 1995, 97, 99. She was chapter leader at the massive George Washington HS campus in Washington Hts until transferring to Gregorio Luperon where she was also CL until she retired. 
 
As a founder of ICE her knowledge and experience helped guide the new caucus through the move of ICE into MORE in 2011. Ellen and I handled the petition campaigns for MORE in 2013 and 2016 and she was relentless in hunting down every piece of information we'd need for each candidate. And when we filled in the petition headings her handwriting was impeccable.
 
She left MORE along with the rest of us and joined the RA Organizers when we began Zoom meetings during the pandemic.

Her analysis of UFT politics was deep and insightful. She earned the love and respect even from the people running the union, with LeRoy Barr being a big admirer.

Her daughter said there would be no burial but a memorial sometime in January.

As for Lisa, I hear there may be a memorial in December but have no information yet.

Wednesday, November 20, 2024

RTC Nov. Meeting Update: Unity tries to hide they are FOR Co-pays as Marianne leaves a comment

I was preparing for court to protect our healthcare that some of the unions including the Uft was trying to call back and privatize, like all those that support project 2025, [force us] into Medicare advantage as the default plan...They brought up a new point, as well. They insisted if we did not pay these copays, they would be passed on to in service members. That’s an interesting approach. I’d argue, though, that these co-pays were imposed only to make Unity’s Medicare Advantage scheme appear more attractive. ... Marianne Pizzitola, comment on Ed notes. 
Wow, we heard some of the same arguments from the Unity gang trying to sabotage our co-pay reso. Marianne's long reach into the co-pay debate at the RTC. Her comment proves the point - Unity favors co-pays but tried to disguise it with bogus arguments, similar to what the UFT was claiming in court, so they must have been briefed.



Wednesday, November 20, 2024
 
I sure did have my fun yesterday, one of my more energetic days. The RTC Exec Bd meets at 11:30 on the 19th floor to do final prep for the 1PM RTC meeting. And there's some food. I had a nice turkey sandwich and there was some extra food at the end, so I took an egg salad for dinner. You see? There are some perks to getting elected. By the way, all RTC exec bd meetings are open to all RTC members. And there were chips and cookies. Oh, and also a meeting. Of course, Arthur who was remote, has the skinny: 

Our Second Democratic RTC Meeting


I went downstairs to hand out the latest ABC leaflet.
 
There was a long line down the block, as they don't open the doors until 12:30. Here's a wrinkle you might not know. When Unity controlled the RTC, there were people checking people in. Now we have to do it ourselves and our volunteers are learning the system. One nasty women who I tried to explain this to said, "So things will get better with you people?" Clearly a Unity hack.

I went upstairs and put some leaflets on the table. A woman told me they were being removed. I ran over and objected but they were gone. He said something about union rules. One of the first things we decided was to have an open table for caucus materials - any caucus. So I said RTC rules say we have the right.
 
I told the union guy I was going to make a stink about it. He called LeRoy, who called me over to discuss the issue and claimed union rules don't allow caucus materials. I pointed out that I raised the issue with Randi 25 years ago and she gave us a table for caucus materials which LeRoy canceled. He said these are different times. I said he was making up rules out of thin air and this isn't the end of it.
 
I checked with Bennett and he said UFT lawyer Rude Beth Norton told him we couldn't have caucus materials. WTF - these people are unbelievable. I decided not to raise it at this meeting.
 
(Later another retiree told me she rescued my leaflets from the goons and I had a batch to give out as people were leaving - and one lady looked at it and is interested in signing up with ABC. I was also yelled at for handing it out by a caucus member who feels no one other than the caucuses have a right to run in the election.)
 
Bennett was great at the meeting in handling a tough situation - super patient, as he should be. When people ask me who I would want for UFT president I say someone like Bennett. Some of my buddies were impatient at why he was being so tolerant - he's giving people enough rope was my reply. I love the interplay of the parliamentary game and saw clearly what Unity was doing - trying to delay the co-pay. They used the argument that we should do this another time to make it stronger. Well, they could have amended it, but clearly had nothing to add when the real purpose was to support the UFT leadership which is for co-pays. So the best they could do was try to delay. 
 
Here is part of Arthur's report on the co-pays.
...the original version of which I actually wrote, was to oppose co-pays on Medicare/ Senor Care. Unity was more polite this month than last, but worked hard to disrupt this. They brought up points that, to me, seemed irrelevant. They said it did not jibe with a City Council bill that insists we retain the same quality coverage we had in 2021.

They brought up a new point, as well. They insisted if we did not pay these copays, they would be passed on to in service members. That’s an interesting approach. I’d argue, though, that these co-pays were imposed only to make Unity’s Medicare Advantage scheme appear more attractive. There was, if I recall correctly, an $1800 ceiling on co-pays in the MA plan, and none for Medicare with Senior Care. Of course, before that Medicare/ Senior Care had NO co-pays. To sell the scheme, which they did not, that had to change.

During the debate a friend and delegate from Florida was texting me that Marianne was working to change the law that the Unity people were raising. Mike Broucom, also from the Marianne wing, went to the mic and pointed out how the Unity arguments were irrelevant -- I would say red herrings.
 
Speaking of Marianne, yesterday was a court date in Albany, but last night she was catching up with the ageist issue over memes mocking RA retirees, and she left this comment and link to her video response and she also offers some update on what happened in court:
Sorry I was late to the conversation (on Aqeel Williams)! I was preparing for court to protect our healthcare that some of the unions including the Uft was trying to call back and privatize, like all those that support project 2025, [force us] into Medicare advantage as the default plan.

And this time, I tried to convince the court they only had to pay $7.50 for any Medicare eligible.

So basically, the unity leadership led the fight against the aged.

One of the Uft lawyers, Alan Klinger admitted in a video a year ago that intro 1099 does not impair collective bargaining, what it did do was reduce what the city would pay for an active worker if it was paying for Retirees. That video is here. https://youtu.be/RWyav-cvbrE?si=nWaUFvx3RmiTQrMV

My statement on Mr. Williams is here:

https://youtu.be/JUjeXY5qiZ4?si=b9oVKe-ansTI5JfZ