Wisconsin schools buck union to cut health costs
By: Byron York | Chief Political Correspondent Follow Him @ByronYork | 07/07/11 
8:05 PM
Getty Images/Justin Sullivan
Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker performs a ceremonial bill signing of the new 
budget law outside his office at the Wisconsin State Capitol on March 11, 2011 
in Madison. The new law helped the Hartland-Lakeside School District save money 
on health care costs by switching providers.
The Hartland-Lakeside School District, about 30 miles west of Milwaukee in tiny 
Hartland, Wis., had a problem in its collective bargaining contract with the 
local teachers union.

The contract required the school district to purchase health insurance from a 
company called WEA Trust. The creation of Wisconsin's largest teachers union -- 
"WEA" stands for Wisconsin Education Association -- WEA Trust made money when 
union officials used collective bargaining agreements to steer profitable 
business its way.

The problem for Hartland-Lakeside was that WEA Trust was charging significantly 
higher rates than the school district could find on the open market. School 
officials knew that because they got a better deal from United HealthCare for 
coverage of nonunion employees. On more than one occasion, Superintendent Glenn 
Schilling asked WEA Trust why the rates were so high. "I could never get a 
definitive answer on that," says Schilling.

Changing to a different insurance company would save Hartland-Lakeside hundreds 
of thousands of dollars that could be spent on key educational priorities -- 
especially important since the cash-strapped state government was cutting back 
on education funding. But teachers union officials wouldn't allow it; the WEA 
Trust requirement was in the contract, and union leaders refused to let 
Hartland-Lakeside off the hook.

That's where Wisconsin's new budget law came in. The law, bitterly opposed by 
organized labor in the state and across the nation, limits the collective 
bargaining powers of some public employees. And it just happens that the 
Hartland-Lakeside teachers' collective bargaining agreement expired on June 30. 
So now, freed from the expensive WEA Trust deal, the school district has 
changed insurers.

"It's going to save us about $690,000 in 2011-2012," says Schilling. Insurance 
costs that had been about $2.5 million a year will now be around $1.8 million. 
What union leaders said would be a catastrophe will in fact be a boon to 
teachers and students.

But the effect of weakening collective bargaining goes beyond money. It also 
has the potential to reshape the adversarial culture that often afflicts public 
education. In Hartland-Lakeside, there's been no war between union-busting 
bureaucrats on one side and impassioned teachers on the other; Schilling speaks 
with great collegiality toward the teachers and says with pride that they've 
been able to work together on big issues. But there has been a deep division 
between the school district and top union executives.

In the health insurance talks, for example, Schilling last year began telling 
teachers about different insurance plans, some of which, like United 
HealthCare's, required a higher deductible. "We involved them, and they 
overwhelmingly endorsed the change to United HealthCare," he says. But even 
with the teachers on board, when school officials presented a 
change-in-coverage proposal to union officials, it was immediately rejected. 
The costly WEA Trust deal stayed in place.

Now, with the collective bargaining agreement gone, Schilling looks forward to 
working more closely with teachers. "I would say the biggest change is we have 
a lot more involvement with a wider scope of teachers," he says. When 
collective bargaining was in effect, "We dealt with a select team of teachers, 
a small group of three or four who were on the bargaining team, and then the 
union director. Any information that went to the teachers went through them. 
Now, we feel that we will have a direct dialogue."

It's not hard to see why union officials hate the new law so much. It not only 
breaks up cherished and lucrative union monopolies like high-cost health 
insurance; it also threatens to break through the union-built wall between 
teachers and administrators and allow the two sides to work together more 
closely. The old union go-betweens, who controlled what their members could and 
could not hear, will be left aside.

Hartland-Lakeside isn't the only school district that is pulling free from 
collective bargaining agreements that mandated WEA Trust coverage. The 
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reports the Pewaukee School District, not far from 
Hartland-Lakeside, will save $378,000 by next year by leaving WEA Trust. The 
Menomonee Falls School District, farther north, will reportedly save $1.3 
million. Facing state cutbacks, the districts can't afford to overpay for 
union-affiliated coverage.

Look for the unions to fight back with everything they have. If the Wisconsin 
situation has shown anything, it is that organized labor views the collective 
bargaining fight as a life-or-death struggle. If the unions lose in Wisconsin, 
the clamor for change could spread to other states. What happened in 
Hartland-Lakeside could become a model for other schools looking for new and 
better ways to do business.

Byron York, The Examiner's chief political correspondent, can be contacted at 
by...@washingtonexaminer.com.

Read more at the Washington Examiner: 
http://washingtonexaminer.com/politics/2011/07/wisconsin-schools-buck-union-cut-health-costs#ixzz1RXkdUKDz


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