RangerDave wrote:
*ETA: I'm not just being snarky here either. I really don't get the h9 people have for workers pooling their resources to gain bargaining power (i.e. forming a union) when it's such standard practice for owners/employers to do the same (i.e. by forming a company). If, instead of a union, you had a private corporation negotiating as a single entity with the city to provide teaching services at city schools, then you'd have exactly the same "collective bargaining" situation, just like you do when the city buys its paper from Staples and its buses from GM.
It's because people are required to send their children to school. Sure, you can home school or go to private school instead, but one costs money and the other many people are unable to devote the time to accomplish, or may simply not feel comfortable doing.
Public school teachers are public employees, providing an essential public service (in the sense that they provide the education we mandate every should to get, and tax people for). Worse, their strikes can have serious negative consequences for kids reaching the end of high school if time constraints for scholarships and college applications can't be met due to a strike.
The comparison to a private company is simply not accurate. It would be far more accurate to compare teachers to firefighters, police officers, or prison workers who are
not allowed to strike. That's the problem. It's not the existence of the union, it's the ability to go on strike as a public employee. Cops and firefighters can't (nor should they be permitted to) and neither should teachers. There's no reason acceptable terms could not be reached, either; police and fire unions do not have much trouble ensuring adequate compensation for the people they represent.