Republished on VDARE.COM on February 03, 2003
The Worm in the Apple: The Washington Times, February 02, 2003
By Chester E. Finn
Veteran financial
journalist,
immigration controversialist and National Education
Association (NEA) watcher Peter Brimelow has penned a
devastating and marvelously readable account of the
malign role of teacher unions in American
primary-secondary education. Be warned, though.
Like its subtitle, "How
Teacher Unions are Destroying American Education," this
volume is about as subtle as a 2 X 4 applied forcefully
to the reader's skull. The unions' relentless spin
machines —deftly portrayed by Mr. Brimelow in these
pages —will strive to dismiss it as yet another attack
on public education by the vast right-wing conspiracy.
But they ought not to be allowed to get away with that.
The emperor's flacks may insist that he's clad in the
raiments of public-interestedness and educational
improvement, but Mr. Brimelow reveals just how nakedly
self-serving he is.
The book contends that
America's two big teacher unions, the NEA and American
Federation of Teachers (AFT), have expertly exploited
government's near monopoly of K-12 schooling to achieve
a hammerlock over the operation of the schools
themselves, the allocation of their resources, the terms
of employment of their teachers and staff—and all
efforts to change or reform them.
Unabashedly comparing his
treatise to Ida Tarbell's famed 1904
expose of John D. Rockefeller's "Standard Oil
Trust", Mr. Brimelow views today's teacher unions as
menacing public-sector counterparts of yesterday's giant
corporate trusts, says that they are at least as
injurious to the public interest, and urges
trust-busting as the most promising way to rein them in.
He's not alone in this dire
view, which resembles that of Stanford's
Terry Moe, long-time union critic
Myron Lieberman and the invaluable Mike Antonucci,
whose
"Educational Intelligence Agency" supplied much of
Mr. Brimelow's material. All regard teacher unions as
the 800-pound gorillas of education policy and politics
and the greatest barriers to the renewal of K-12
schooling in the United States.
They're not wrong. Mr.
Brimelow adds rich documentation and examples to a
familiar and durable recognition among politicians,
policymakers and other education groups. I have sat
through perhaps a thousand meetings where some promising
idea got shelved as soon as someone posed the inevitable
question: "But what will the unions think?" The
education field's basic operating assumption is that
little can happen to which they object.
Exceptions occur from time
to time, as Mr. Brimelow notes. A crusading governor
will push a "career ladder" or "charter school" proposal
through the legislature. A single-minded superintendent
will press for performance-based pay or the right of
school principals to select their teaching staff without
regard to seniority. Limited school-voucher plans have
even slipped through the union blockade in a few places.
Indeed, today's tidal wave of "standards-based reform,"
an amalgam of statewide academic expectations, tests and
"accountability" arrangements that is America's dominant
education reform thrust (and was codified by Congress in
last year's "No Child Left Behind" act), has swept
forward despite many teacher-union objections.
They're powerful, in other
words, but not omnipotent. And they're not wholly evil,
although it gets ever harder to find credible contrary
examples. Mr. Brimelow does not, for example, give
sufficient credit to the fine work done by the
AFT—particularly when led by the late Albert Shanker—in
promoting solid curricula for U.S. schools and advancing
democracy in countries that lack it. (Shanker also
pushed for standards-based reform, but he must be seen
as the exception that proves the rule. Since his death,
the AFT has become far more like the NEA and, indeed,
has sought to merge the two organizations into a single
behemoth.)
Despite such occasional
gaps in their armor, Mr. Brimelow has the unions
accurately pegged as enormously influential obstacles to
the reform of K-12 education in America. That influence
stems from five main sources.
First, their size and deep
pockets. Combined, they would comprise much the largest
labor union in the land, and their millions of members
pour hundreds of millions of dollars in dues into their
national treasuries and those of their state and local
affiliates. The actual figures are closely guarded but
Mr. Brimelow estimates that the annual take totals a
stupendous $1.25 billion.
Second, the ubiquitousness
of collective bargaining in public education today and
the unions' success in cramming more and more education
decisions into its jurisdiction. No longer do contracts
pertain only to salaries, benefits and working
conditions. Brazenly terming this contract-creep
"education reform"—the claim is that placing
"professionals" in charge of schooling will benefit the
students—the "teacher trust" has widened the bargaining
process to include budgets, class size, teacher
deployment, recruitment and evaluation, the school
calendar and schedule, and, perhaps most importantly,
issues of academic standards, curriculum and
instruction.
The unions seek, in effect,
to function as both labor and management. And they have
approached that goal in many states and districts,
including "closed shop" and "agency shop" rules that
force every teacher to join (or, at least, pay dues to
and be represented by) the local union. Only a handful
of southern and western states have resisted mandatory
public sector collective bargaining.
Third, the extent of union
political influence at local, state and national
levels—and the joining of those levels into a
single-minded machine that the NEA calls "UniServe," a
structure that resembles nothing so much as a tightly
knit and highly structured political party in a country
with scant political opposition. This is poorly
understood by journalists and policy analysts who tend
to focus on events in Washington and the speeches and
advertorials of the unions' national spokesmen such as
Shanker, current AFT president Sandra Feldman and former
NEA head Bob Chase.
Yet the roots of
teacher-union power lie in 50 state capitols and
thousands of local districts, where it is common to
observe brass-knuckled behavior that directly
contradicts the Sunday newsprint musings of the
high-profile national leaders. That behavior notably
includes direct political action on behalf of candidates
(for school board, legislature, etc.) who embrace the
union agenda and against those who resist.
As Mr. Brimelow explains, "UniServe
has had a powerful centralizing effect in at least two
ways. It has brought the full weight of the national and
state organizations to bear even in the smallest, most
remote districts. And it has tended to unify all levels
of the teacher unions—national, state, and local—behind
a single agenda . . . ."
Fourth, the Teacher Trust's
deep reserves of patience, relentlessness and
discipline. Even when they lose a battle, they often end
up winning the war because they outlast their opponents.
A forceful governor like Tennessee's Lamar Alexander or
Michigan's John Engler must eventually leave office.
When he does, the union is still there, chewing away at
unwanted reforms, putting caps and restrictions on
charter-school laws, redirecting funds from voucher
programs into class size reduction initiatives and
emasculating "alternative certification" by bringing
teacher licensure under the aegis of an ostensibly
independent (but, in reality, union- and
ed-school-dominated) "professional standards board".
If education policy in
America resembles a giant rubber band that yearns to
resume its previous shape just as soon as the tension is
released, much of that elasticity comes from the teacher
union and their allies.
Fifth and finally, despite
making so much mischief, the Teacher Trust has attained
what Mr. Brimelow terms a "privileged position" in U.S.
society.
It plays the media like a
string quartet, alternating among efforts to cajole and
reward favorable coverage, to confuse observers with a
fog of jargon and doublespeak, and to punish any who
throw sand into the gears of its spin machine.
The unions' capacity to
retain this position of privilege owes much to its
effectiveness in equating the interests of teachers with
the vitality of that revered American institution known
as "public education" and thus with the long-term
well-being of democracy itself. That success arises in
part from expert spin (and the intimidation of critics),
to be sure but, like so much high-impact public
relations, it incorporates a kernel of sincerity. Mr.
Brimelow sees the unions as profoundly self-serving,
yes, but not as hypocritical. Deep down, they really do
believe that what's good for teacher unions is good for
teachers and that what's good for teachers is good for
public education and its pupils.
Their spin machine is
pretty awesome, too, coopting the language and symbols
of education reform while employing jujitsu moves to
turn their force in different directions. That is why,
for example, the unions have positioned themselves as
favoring standards and "accountability" while skillfully
fending off nearly all efforts to hold educators to
account for their results. As a consequence, children
who fail to learn enough may be denied their diplomas
but those who failed to teach them enough go unscathed.
The unions, moreover, have
styled themselves as agents of change, even as reformers
of their own least loved practices. Mr. Brimelow shows,
however, that claims of "new unionism" have been mooted
for decades, always with favorable press coverage,
always with little or nothing resulting from it.
Though they're undeniably
adept at this kind of thing, it doesn't always work
quite as well as intended. Though Americans like
teachers and believe in public education, teacher unions
themselves don't enjoy an overall positive image. (Few
unions do.) Moreover, even as they bore wormholes in the
education apple, Mr. Brimelow detects more than a few
weaknesses in their own structures, including
organizational inflexibility, failure of imagination and
slackening enthusiasm among younger teachers.
The unions are also
inefficient and costly, lavishing high salaries and
privileges on their elites while the incomes of
rank-and-file members show only modest gains. Mr.
Brimelow repeatedly compares them with the Soviet
economy during Leonid Brezhnev's time and implies that
they may someday fall of their own weight. Yet he does
not think the United States can afford to wait for
spontaneous collapse. Just as the Soviet empire's demise
was speeded by external pressures from the likes of
Ronald Reagan, Margaret Thatcher and Pope John Paul II,
so Mr. Brimelow urges a bold and comprehensive set of
trust-busting actions to be taken by politicians, policy
makers and other influentials.
He lists two dozen such
actions, ranging from the reform of state public-sector
bargaining laws to breaking up large school systems and
outsourcing more school services. Nearly all of his
suggestions make fine sense. Together, they would
transform public education for the better. But Mr.
Brimelow makes a point of not appraising their political
feasibility. And therein lies the rub. The biggest
obstacle to purposeful efforts to bring the unions to
heel is the absence of plucky national and state
leaders, of determined, public-spirited trust-busters a
la Theodore Roosevelt.
None of them appears to
live in Washington, where bipartisanship has become the
watchword of federal education policy, which confers
upon Sen. Edward M. Kennedy a de facto veto over
everything and thus amounts to an insurance policy for
the teacher unions. Moreover, while the Bush White House
has snubbed the NEA on several occasions, that mainly
has to do with pique over the union's refusal to endorse
the president's signature "No Child Left Behind"
legislation rather than any deeper seated policy
disagreement.
The AFT, often nimbler and
more astute when it comes to politics, applauded that
law and has been rewarded with White House visits and
various joint ventures, grants and contracts with the
Education Department. Perhaps more important, the AFT's
support has made the administration wary of policies
(such as school-choice schemes) that would rankle Sandra
Feldman.
At the state level, a few
governors have triumphed from time to time over union
opposition. One thinks of Jeb Bush's recent reelection
in Florida as well as John Engler's steely insistence
that the unions surrender their exclusive right to
furnish liability insurance to Michigan teachers.
A few others (e.g.
Colorado's Bill Owens) are fortunate enough to live in
right-to-work states where the unions are
comparatively weak. Like the White House, however, most
state policymakers judge that the better part of valor
is not to cross them—or at least to offset measures they
don't like with actions that they welcome.
Of late, this stance has
become almost as common among Republicans as Democrats,
further proof of the unions' shrewd recognition that, in
today's political world, they are wise to court (and
underwrite) members of both parties. Absent powerful
trustbusters, we must count on decay from within. That
means Peter Brimelow's excellent list of policy changes
is apt to remain a dream for some time to come. The
teacher unions are apt to retain much power, though
perhaps a bit less than before. And education reform in
America is apt to continue progressing at a worm-like
pace.
Chester E. Finn, Jr. is
president of the
Thomas B. Fordham Foundation and a senior fellow at
the Manhattan Institute.
Copyright © 2003 News World
Communications, Inc. All rights reserved.