Posted on 06/02/2016 1:33:25 PM PDT by MichCapCon
While teachers at Michigans largest school district were living under a wage freeze, and more recently hearing rumors of possible payless paydays, one school employee who is also president of the local teachers union got a huge raise.
That district is the insolvent and academically challenged Detroit Public Schools, and the union president is Ivy Bailey of the Detroit Federation of Teachers. Bailey was listed as a teacher in 2013-14 and earned $70,176. Her salary shot up 31 percent to $91,877 in 2014-15.
Baileys compensation is listed in a state salary database of employees enrolled in the school employee pension system. Its unclear why she was given such a big raise. Michigan Capitol Confidential puts in Freedom of Information Act requests for salary data at the beginning of each fall school year. Some union contracts call for pay increases after the school year has ended.
In 2014-15, Bailey earned $37,742 for teaching and received another $36,381 for, according to the pension database, other professional business and $17,754 for employee professional services leave. It's not clear what "other professional business" refers to but like Bailey's union pay, it does count in the calculations of her public school employee pension.
Part of the increase may be due to Baileys promotion to interim union president in August 2015. Bailey took the promotion once former President Steve Conn was ousted by the unions executive board for misconduct.
The average salary of Detroit Public School teachers was $63,716 in 2014-15, according to the Michigan Department of Education. That's the most recent data available.
DPS has allowed individuals on the districts payroll to do union work while clocked in as a district employee in a setup known as union release time. In many cases, the individual gets a union salary that can be used to boost an eventual payout from the underfunded school pension system run by the state. As of this school year, DPS had seven employees who were being paid for union work that counted toward their school pension calculations.
The Michigan Senate has voted to eliminate taxpayer-funded union release time, which is costing taxpayers millions annually. But Senate Bill 279, sponsored by Sen. Marty Knollenberg, R-Troy, is sitting in the Michigan House in the Commerce and Trade Committee, where it has not been taken up.
Bailey and DPS Spokeswoman Michelle Zdrodowski didnt return emails seeking an explanation of the breakdown of the salary.
That’s how you run a socialist top down oligarchy. No surprises here.
And the common union member nods and says yep, it’s the way it is.
Ivy Bailey. "Jes' give me a little hush money."
Ok...when I saw the headline, I was expecting a salary somewhere in the upper 100,000 range as a union president since this is a union controlled top to bottom democrat dystopia, I mean, city
So' it's a little hard to get outraged...
Isn't it funny how this always seems to happen in places controlled by black Democrats? Hey, you Detroit teachers support this kind of crap, because it gives you access to other peoples' money to create your own fiefdom where you have tenure, unlimited lifetime security, and loads of time off, or that's the theory anyway. It worked pretty well for you until the unions, expanding welfare class and their Democrat allies drove off all the white taxpayers with crime and the social extortion.
But alas, those days are gone. Detroit has become the new Mogadishu. And when your city goes down the toilet, there's gonna be a time where there isn't enough "other peoples' money" to pay you guys and still support your bosses in the style to which they have become accustomed.
And let's get one thing straight. Ms. Ivy Bailey isn't gonna let your problems affect her perks.
When the taxpayers' money runs out, you guys just gotta suck it up, because, well, you're the piss ants. And Ms. Ivy Bailey isn't.
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