Posted on 03/21/2013 8:49:09 AM PDT by MichCapCon
Wayne State University President Allan Gilmour says its the unions way or its the highway.
When asked Tuesday if he thought an unprecedented eight-year union contract that was written to circumvent the states right-to-work law would make it difficult to recruit faculty, he said those who didnt like it had an option: They can always quit.
The arrogance of that statement is astounding. The retiring president of the states third-largest university told faculty members who may not agree with the unions policies or its politics that it will be almost a decade before they can exercise their rights granted by the states new right-to-work law.
And, hes telling potential faculty members who could elevate the universitys status locally and nationally that if they want to work for Wayne State their future will be overseen by a division of the American Federation of Teachers until 2021.
Gilmours statement is surprising only in that he had the gall to make it publicly and then try and defend it. But it followed other arrogant comments he made earlier in the day in testimony before a House appropriations subcommittee. Gilmour told legislators to trust him because he said he got good concessions in return for the long-term deal.
Taxpayers, however, know better than to believe bureaucrats who say, trust me.
Gilmour, who makes $400,000 a year and is tasked with doing whats best with the tax dollars that pay the universitys salaries and bills, said the contract provides cost certainty. In some respects, it does. According to The Detroit News, a professor who makes $75,000 a year will get a 19 percent increase in salary over the eight years.
Taxpayers footing that bill would like to have that kind of certainty.
But if it was all about certainty, why not a 20-year deal? How about 100 years? Why didnt the university negotiate decade-long deals before?
The answer is obvious: Because neither the union, nor the administration wanted to lock themselves into lengthy contracts because there are too many fluid circumstances with the economy, with enrollment, with federal dollars and with state appropriations.
Gilmour soon will exit Wayne State and the long-term deal he endorsed. His successor, taxpayers and faculty members who think they are able to determine whats best for themselves and their paychecks, however, are stuck on a road to nowhere.
Most college have little intellectual reserves left.
And any college with a unionized faculty has squandered those reserves.
Avoid that place like the plague.
A contract cannot trump or circumvent a law. This won’t survive litigation.
Yeah there will be lawsuits from within and without.
Washtenaw county also approved a 10 year extension.
The deal must greatly benefit him.
Its kind of funny how quickly they turned on their own employees considering they ran ads calling for “The freedom to unionize”.
Something like 40% of union members polled supported RTW.
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