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By jimbo (anonymous) | Posted September 20, 2012 at 14:03:52 in reply to Comment 81100
great comment.
What can they do? They can persuade people to elect a different government who will give them what they want. They can go elsewhere.
The right to collective bargaining does not guarantee some result of that bargaining - it is not a right to strike. The public worker is in an far stronger position relative the state than the private worker to the corporation. They have job security, stability, freedom to negotiate, and massive organisational power.
I don't know where I stand yet on the government's withdrawing of strike votes, but I do think the motive to strike is totally misguided. Teachers work hard - but so does everyone else when you put it the way they do. The waste disposal worker works hard, so does the mailperson, etc. Yet when you get a yearly raise and a great pension and benefits, and the others don't, eventually there will be a gap. Teachers simply can't make up for this by arguing they do all these extracurriculars - it cannot justify salaries that are well above most other public servants.
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