Nearly 100 attended a meeting organized by realigned teachers on July 21, 
2004. This was the second meeting to discuss moving forward with a lawsuit to 
oppose teacher realignments and to hire labor attorney Gregg M. Corwin to 
represent the realigned teachers. Corwin asked every teacher who wants to become a 
plaintiff to sign a retainer agreement and pay a $500 fee up front.  

Corwin stated that he is unwilling to allege violations of teacher contract 
rights by the board due to a conflict of interest. It is not in Corwin's 
interest to taken any action that puts him at odds with the teachers' union 
leadership and DFL & Labor endorsed Minneapolis School Board members. Corwin works for 
more than 11 union bodies, including an AFCSME Council that represents 
employees of the Minneapolis School District and that has endorsed current members 
of the school board.

The lawsuit that Gregg M. Corwin proposes to file on behalf of realigned MPS 
teachers is based on the Teacher Tenure Act, and the teacher tenure act 
requires teachers to seek and exhaust administrative remedies before going to court 
in order to enforce rights under the act. However, Mr. Corwin is not advising 
teachers to seek administrative remedies before going to court.

Corwin is proposing to challenge a massive "realignment" of teaching 
positions recently carried out by the district as "unreasonable" and not in the best 
interests of the students. Without Corwins lawsuit the district is going to 
reverse some of its unreasonable reassignments, especially those that will 
negatively affect the district's income. For example, the district faces the loss of 
millions of dollars in Medicaid funding  
if it replaces qualified autism teachers with unqualified autism teachers.

The district bumped 190 of the highest-seniority elementary school teachers 
with multiple teaching licenses from their jobs. The plan is to replace those 
old-timers with elementary school teachers employed with the school district 
for less than 5 years. Hundreds of other teacher positions were realigned to 
create the necessary vacancies.

The Teacher Tenure Act generally does not allow teachers to be bumped out of 
positions that are not being cut or substantially modified. Involuntary 
reassignments are allowed only after the district takes other steps to avoid laying 
off displaced, tenured teachers and before putting anyone on an unrequested 
leave of absence (layoff). If the district had played by the rules, few if any 
of the 190 high-seniority elementary teachers who have been bumped from their 
positions would have been needed to plug holes in other areas in order to 
prevent the layoff of tenured elementary teachers nearest the bottom of the 
seniority list.  

According to about a dozen teachers who I spoke with at the meeting of 
realigned teachers on July 21, the right of a teacher to not be bumped from a job, 
except as allowed under the teacher tenure act is generally not observed in the 
Minneapolis Public Schools. Why? Teachers do not file grievances over the 
issue because they fear "under the table" retaliation from management, cannot 
obtain representation from the union, and / or have been misinformed about their 
rights and duties under the teachers contract and the MN teachers tenure law.

-Doug Mann, King Field
Mann for School Board
www.educationright.com
REMINDERS:
1. Think a member has violated the rules? Email the list manager at [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
before continuing it on the list. 
2. Don't feed the troll! Ignore obvious flame-bait.

For state and national discussions see: http://e-democracy.org/discuss.html
For external forums, see: http://e-democracy.org/mninteract
________________________________

Minneapolis Issues Forum - A City-focused Civic Discussion - Mn E-Democracy
Post messages to: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subscribe, Un-subscribe, etc. at: http://e-democracy.org/mpls

Reply via email to