Public Sector Unions Are Trampling Our Public Services
Teachers unions, police unions, and prison guard unions have inordinate control over public policy, and California is suffering the consequences.

In a short 1814 fable from Russian poet Ivan Krylov, the Inquisitive Man spends three hours at a natural history museum and tells his friend he "saw everything there was to see and examined it carefully" and found it "all so astonishing." The friend then asks what he thought of the elephant. The man retorted: "(D)on't tell anybody—but the fact is that I didn't notice the elephant!"
That is the origin of the phrase, "the elephant in the room." It means, as Cambridge Dictionary explains, "an obvious problem or difficult situation that people do not want to talk about." There are many reasons people ignore a 10,000-lb. creature blocking their way, but often it involves cowardice. It's too hard—or controversial—to discuss how it got there and how to get rid of it.
This is an obvious allegory to California's state government. Gov. Gavin Newsom recently proposed a new bond measure to fund programs to deal with the state's homelessness crisis. California already spends several billion dollars a year on the problem. Localities such as Los Angeles spend as much as $1 million per unit on housing for homeless people, yet the problem keeps getting worse.
Last year, California spent approximately $136 billion on its public schools. The latest data show dramatic drops in test scores, with only a third of the state's students meeting math-proficiency standards. If you're apt to solely blame the pandemic shutdowns, consider that a 2019 study found only 30 percent of students proficient in reading.
Throughout California, pension costs keep rising, grabbing a larger share of local budgets and crowding out public services. Despite a previous $97.5-billion budget surplus, California has been remarkably unable to fix its creaky transportation system, improve public school performance, provide adequate water supplies during the recent drought, deal with misbehaving police officers, provide safe and user-friendly transit systems and, well, you name it.
Just try to name one California agency that's known for its efficiency and high levels of service. (It's a trick question.) Nevertheless, the Legislature and governor spend enormous time and resources trying to address these intractable problems through various tax-increase proposals, legislation, reforms, oversight commissions, inspector generals, auditors, lawsuits, and bond measures. Yet the public never sees substantive improvement.
The reason is everyone is politely avoiding the giant pachyderm. I'm referring to the state's public-sector unions, which—thanks to their enormous financial might and legions of members—control the Capitol. The California Teachers' Association is the most-powerful voice in education. Police and fire unions are the best-funded and most muscular political players at the local level. The prison guards' union has an inordinate influence on corrections policy.
Unions aren't entirely to blame for California's myriad problems and crises, but they provide a heckler's veto to any reform idea that could realistically improve public services. Consider how vociferously teachers' unions opposed school reopenings. Lawmakers rarely propose any idea that would antagonize any of the state's easily antagonized unions. Imagine running a business where the employees could immediately quash any proposal that might help consumers or reduce operating costs.
"Through their extensive political activity, these government workers' unions help elect the very politicians who will act as 'management' in their contract negotiations—in effect handpicking those who will sit across the bargaining table from them," noted Daniel DiSalvo in a 2010 article in National Affairs. No wonder California's municipal firefighters earn on average more than $200,000 a year—even as the state complains about an inadequate number of firefighters.
Sadly, no one with power even mentions these obvious roadblocks as they seek to reform any aspect of any public service. The progressive Democrats who control Sacramento are attached at the waist to public-sector unions, so they sidestep the elephant even though it's trampling (and pooping) on their favorite programs. They side with this well-heeled special interest—and with workers who earn unfathomable compensation packages—even though it hurts the poor.
Republicans will thankfully blast CTA and SEIU, but they take a "don't see the elephant" approach when it comes to police unions—who protect abusive officers the same way that teachers' unions coddle their incompetents. Like all unions, the police and prison guard varieties actively lobby for higher taxes and derail even the most modest proposed changes in how their departments operate. Policing is a tough job, but that doesn't mean we can't improve oversight and revamp procedures.
"Accountability is basically nonexistent in American government," wrote Philip K. Howard in his new Until we acknowledge that it's not natural for the elephant to dominate the room, the state will never fix its problems or improve its ailing public services. This column was first published in The Orange County Register.
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One of the many reasons why public unions should not be legal. Being able to influence who you "negotiate" with (hard to "negotiate" when nobody has any skin in the game) makes the entire process a sham.
...But this is what the pols want. They do not care and they know their voters do not care.
Thank JFK for government unions.
Thank you, JFK.
"Until we acknowledge that it's not natural for the elephant to dominate the room..."
More like the donkey dominates the room.
The simple fix for this is just to vote the bastards out of office. Voting fixes everything. It fixed Trump, didn't it?
You think the Democrats really give a fig about the poor other than as a source of votes? That they would choose the poor over the source of their money?
Public sector unions need to be outlawed. No one working for the public, being paid by the taxpayers at the public trough should be allowed to unionize.
As for "stretchin' Gretchen, can't wait until Pres. Trump has her indicted, her and her little drunken alcoholic lesbian attorney general.
"Republicans will thankfully blast CTA and SEIU, but they take a "don't see the elephant" approach when it comes to police unions"
That may be true of California Republicans, I don't know. Most of the Republicans I know are far too fond of the police in general, but it does not stop them from wanting to abolish their union. Along with the other public sector unions.
Which, I think by their nature creates a sort of perverse motivation feedback loop, and seem to attract some really very corrupt or corruptible people to their leadership. Where do police officers go when they are fired with cause? Not to jail, they get employed at the union. Speaking of:
"California police union executive director ran fentanyl operation from home: feds"
https://nypost.com/2023/03/30/san-jose-police-association-office-manager-arrested-for-importing-fentanyl/
How does one exactly suffer consequences a majority apparently wants or allows or permits to happen every election cycle?
There is no such thing as an election of any consequence. That's the problem with a duopoly. It's much more beneficial for them to make deals re elections - we won't bother competing here, you don't compete there. So - only one party runs and no accountability
Whoa... this article is a surprise.
Even though it needs an editor:
"Accountability is basically nonexistent in American government," wrote Philip K. Howard in his new
*looks around*
In his new what?
Yes, an error so egregious you can't not notice it.
Oldsmobile. His new Oldsmobile. In metallic pee.
the new Oldsmobiles are in early this year.
I posted it below.
you found the elephant.
Of course it’s not going to happen either, but the solution is not to get rid of unions but, rather, to privatize schools and fire response and decriminalize everything except murder, robbery and assault and battery. With many fewer criminals to capture and incarcerate you automatically get a 90% downsize on police and jailers. There should not even BE any public services in the first place! A similar downsizing of all other government functions and EVERYTHING will get better. Like I said, I’m not holding my breath on eliminating public employee unions either.
Usually accountability starts with holding people responsible for what they do. Not for what they might do in a far distant future where cows fly and shit butterflies.
Only the voters can hold their politicians accountable. If the voters elect only the officials that the police and teachers unions approve of, then there IS NO accountability.
Greenhut is a joke. "Republicans will thankfully blast CTA and SEIU, but they take a "don't see the elephant" approach when it comes to police unions"
Really? Why are the majority of the problems with Police in areas run by Democrats? Then you have the Democrat controlled Government telling the Police to stand down while the Democrat's Useful Idiots protest and burn the town down.
Why don't Republicans actually run for office in those places run by D's?
In my city, they aren't allowed to.
'Jungle Primaries' means no ballot access for the Republicans. They get to ride pine with the Libertarians and the Greens.
> ‘Jungle Primaries’ means no ballot access for the Republicans. They get to ride pine with the Libertarians and the Greens.
cool
"California already spends several billion dollars a year on the problem. Localities such as Los Angeles spend as much as $1 million per unit on housing for homeless people, yet the problem keeps getting worse."
And yet Californians have the government they keep voting for.
Toynbee: "An autopsy of history will show that all great nations commit suicide. "
More like watching Prometheus having his liver ripped out on a daily basis.
The elephant in the room is that all of these public sector unions are Democrat activists. They all vote and campaign for democrats. In other words, this is a problem caused by Democrat party rule in blue states, due to blue metropolises. But the author goes out of his way to mention that Republicans like the police. What a joke. Reason is no better than NYT, WP, NPR or any one of the leftist rags propagandizing the western world.
The elephant in the room is that all of these public sector unions are Democrat activists. They all vote and campaign for democrats.
You think that police unions, corrections officer unions, and fire/rescue worker unions all support Democrats exclusively? Hardly. Unions and corporations both will support whatever politicians are likely to implement policies that benefit them. If you view that as a problem, then maybe your issue is with the way political campaigns are financed.
Here's the full text of that truncated penultimate paragraph:
An what builds 'Unions' of people to lobby for Gov-Guns????
Gov-Guns having control over EVERYTHING!
My guess is that California and other blue states see the solution for the federal government to backstop state government pension shortages as Obama did for GM union pensions. They will eventually push for the Feds to take over the pensions.
A good start to solving the problem is to forbid any public union from donating or campaigning for any official who has any budgetary or oversight over the agency that the union represents. It is simply a form of bribery.
A good start to solving the problem is to forbid any public union from donating or campaigning for any official who has any budgetary or oversight over the agency that the union represents. It is simply a form of bribery.
I'd be fine with that. As long as you also include corporations and don't allow them to donate to or campaign for any official with budgetary or regulatory oversight into that corporation's industry. Of course, either of those would run afoul of Citizens United.
If you're apt to solely blame the pandemic shutdowns, consider that a 2019 study found only 30 percent of students proficient in reading.
That study is known as The Nation's Report Card, put out regularly by the National Center for Education Statistics, part of the U.S. Department of Education. That same study showed Texas at 25% proficient in Reading. Texas does not allow public employees to collectively bargain at all. Massachusetts and New Jersey were the highest at 45% and 43%, respectively. Does anyone think that teachers' unions in those solid blue states are much weaker than in California? Of course, Utah, Idaho, and Wyoming weren't as high as Massachusetts and NJ, but they were higher than the national average (by a statistically significant amount), and they are solidly Republican.
Perhaps education results in different states depend on a lot more than whether they have unions.
What might be unique to Texas, which might also impact their English reading scores.
Hmm, let me think, real hard.
Unique? Thinking about the large immigrant population? Hmm, let me think real hard what other states might have large immigrant populations.
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