Friday, November 30, 2018

AFT President Randi Weingarten Teams Up with Steven Spielberg, Facing History and Ourselves and the National Council for the Social Studies to Launch Classroom Curriculum to Combat Hatred

For Immediate Release
November 29, 2018

Contact: Oriana Korin
202-374-6103
okorin@aft.org
www.aft.org

AFT President Randi Weingarten Teams Up with Steven Spielberg, Facing History and Ourselves and the National Council for the Social Studies to Launch Classroom Curriculum to Combat Hatred

WASHINGTON—As the United States experiences an increase in anti-Semitism, hate speech and hate-driven violence, the American Federation of Teachers has partnered with Oscar-winning director Steven Spielberg, Facing History and Ourselves (Facing History) and the National Council for the Social Studies to host an online conversation to discuss teaching these difficult subjects, using the 25th anniversary and re-release of Spielberg’s film Schindler's List. The webinar will include the launch of Facing History curriculum, which will be featured on ShareMyLesson.com in a new collection aimed at providing educators and students with productive ways to combat anti-Semitism and racism, help students cope with traumatic experiences and connect history to contemporary events.

Share My Lesson (SML), the AFT’s free, web-based platform gives educators access to high-quality, user-generated, standards-aligned pre-K-12 lesson plans to support student learning, and is utilized by educators nationwide.

AFT President Randi Weingarten will join Spielberg and Laura Tavares with Facing History on the webinar, where they will discuss the legacy of the landmark film and ways to incorporate its lessons given the uptick in anti-Semitic violence plaguing American communities. They’ll also share effective strategies to prepare students to be thoughtful, emotionally engaged viewers of the film, with a focus on expanding Holocaust education and identifying specific ways the film can be used to inspire activism in students. The webinar will also feature reflections from Schindler’s list survivor Rena Finder.

In citing SML’s ability to use cultural context to teach critical lessons, Weingarten noted: “This is a significant tool for all teachers who have wondered how to teach their kids about the danger of history repeating itself. This particular SML collection can help kids draw parallels between the historical genocide of the Holocaust and the troubling resurgence we see in hate speech and anti-Semitism today, and help provide meaning and structure to the concepts of empathy, compassion and bravery.

“A majority of Americans feel that something like the Holocaust could happen again. We vow never to forget this painful past, and to teach these lessons to our kids so they can fight injustice when they see it.”

Roger Brooks, president and CEO of Facing History and co-host of the webinar, said: “By turning a
critical lens on pivotal moments in the past, we help young people make essential connections
between history and the moral choices they confront today. Beginning with our partnership on the
first teaching guide 25 years ago, the power of Schindler’s List as an examination of the choices made
leading to the Holocaust remains as strong as ever. We’re proud to help facilitate challenging and
meaningful conversations with young people about what can happen to democracy when the value
of human dignity is diminished.”

Lawrence Paska, executive director of the National Council for the Social Studies, added: “We are
proud to support this special program as a way to foster important conversations with educators on
the power of film to move us toward action. We thank Steven Spielberg for sharing his vision with us
to teach about the Holocaust and the importance of human rights education, and to help our
students build a world that respects the dignity and rights of all people.”

Nov. 30 edition, Pension Issues in the News



NOVEMBER 30, 2018

NATIONAL NEWS + OPINION

Barron's
Disturbing new assessments about global warming, including the National Climate ... California is changing requirements around public pensions.

PLANSPONSOR
Various proposals could affect reported funded levels for public pension plans, according to the first Public Pension Viewpoints by Goldman Sachs ...

The Pew Charitable Trusts (blog)
The Pew Charitable Trusts has made key components of its comprehensive 50-state research on state public pensions available to the public in a new ...

Pensions & Investments
U.S. public pension funds are boosting allocations to emerging market debt and international equities, recognizing they can't hit targets for investment ...

The News Tribune
Jan Goodwin, executive director of the Educational Retirement Board that oversees a $13 billion education pension fund for public school districts and ...

New York Post
Some actually increase pensions for members of certain public-employee unions; others boost other benefits. But each bill is a giveaway to some ...

Governing
As a protest against “politically correct” investing, he decided to run for a seat on the California Public Employee Retirement System's board of ...

Capitol Solutions
He wants them to dedicate the revenue to fund pensions for public employees ... In the email to lawmakers, Beshear said gaming could fund pensions ...

Wall Street Journal
U.S. public pension funds are taking on more real estate, and at times some of the riskiest types of property investments, as they try to close their ...

Dallas News (blog)
All but a handful of the local public pension funds in Texas have the same problem. They picked the wrong monkeys to manage their money.

Washington Post
Measured by the ultimate test of long-range planning — their willingness fully to fund billions of dollars' worth of retirement obligations for public ...

Wall Street Journal
The state's public pensions boast one of the lowest-funded ratios in the country. A recent analysis by Fitch Ratings found that Connecticut trailed only ...

Pension360
From a median average of 8% in 2010, the return assumptions of public pension plans have fallen to record low of 7.45% as of November this year, ...

Reason Foundation
The interplay between the privatization of government functions and its impacts on public sector pension systems is poorly understood and rife with ...

U.S. News & World Report
Pennsylvania lawmakers are closing the books on a 2-year General Assembly session that included major new laws on public pensions and ...

Barron's
Without a doubt, the 401(k) has hastened or improved retirement for a large segment of the population, namely people with full-time jobs and matching ...


Thursday, November 29, 2018

AFT President Randi Weingarten Joins Michigan and Ohio Leaders to Support GM Workers

For Immediate Release
November 27, 2018

Contact:
Oriana Korin
202-374-6103
okorin@aft.org



WASHINGTON  In response to the news that General Motors will restructure five factories in North America and cut roughly 14,000 jobs, including thousands in Ohio and Michigan, AFT President Randi Weingarten said:

“This is a devastating blow to working families in Michigan and Ohio. Idling these plants doesn’t just affect the people who work in them, it thwarts the economic engine of their entire communities. When a large employer shuts down, mothers, fathers, firefighters, teachers and small business owners across the area are harmed too, by the effects of the draconian job loss in that community.

“It didn’t have to be this way. This mess is a direct result of a toxic combination of corporate greed and a right-wing political agenda that protects CEOs at the expense of the rest of us. As employees on the factory floor are getting laid off, GM executives are profiting handily from stock buybacks this year. President Trump visited these towns promising to restore jobs and prosperity, and his corporate tax cut was another promise to create and sustain jobs, not destroy them. He has broken his promise yet again.

“The educators, nurses and public employees in these cities and towns stand with their brothers and sisters at GM and are ready to fight back alongside the elected leaders who understand the devastation this will bring to their communities.”

AFT Michigan President David Hecker said: “This is a far cry from the comeback we were promised. The working people of Michigan get up and go to work every day to put dinner on the table and save a little money for retirement, but they’re being sabotaged by a president who’s more concerned with protecting his corporate cronies with tax breaks. And GM isn’t much better: Closing operations at Michigan’s Detroit-Hamtramck and Warren plants is a cruel and callous insult to the workforce that’s bailed out this company and the entire community that’s supported them.”

Ohio Federation of Teachers President Melissa Cropper said: “Many of our students in Lordstown, Ohio, have parents who work at GM, and we pride ourselves on educating and training the next
generation of working people across the state. The effects of this closure will be felt in homes and businesses across the area, too many of which have yet to recover fully from the Great Recession. We’ve made the investment in our workforce, but Donald Trump and his CEO friends refuse to meet us halfway.”

Tuesday, November 27, 2018

AFT’s Weingarten Responds to Betsy DeVos’ Lies on Fox News

For Immediate Release
November 27, 2018

Contact:
Andrew Crook
607-280-6603
acrook@aft.org
www.aft.org

AFT’s Weingarten Responds to Betsy DeVos’ Lies on Fox News

WASHINGTON—AFT President Randi Weingarten issued the following statement after Education Secretary Betsy DeVos attacked teachers’ unions today on the Fox Business Network:

“Betsy DeVos is showing her true colors. We are fighting for the safe and welcoming public schools that kids deserve, healthcare protections so people aren’t one pre-existing condition away from bankruptcy, affordable college without life-burdening student debt, and decent wages. Since she is against all of that, Betsy is attacking the unions that create a voice for teachers to advocate on these issues. As secretary of education, it is her sworn duty to help kids and their communities reach their full potential. Comments like these do the opposite, and she knows it.”

REVIEW & COMMENT - Board Policy 3.31 Graduate Follow-Up System and Board Policy 3.40 Recognition of Veteran Status


TO:
Inter Faculty Organization
Minnesota State College Faculty
Minnesota State University Association of
     Administrative and Service Faculty
LeadMN - Minnesota State College Student Association
Students United - Minnesota State University Student Association
Minnesota Association of Professional Employees
American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees
Middle Management Association

Colleagues,

There are two board policies that are available for review and comment.  The policies are located on the P&P review site at https://mnscu.sharepoint.com/sites/policy/SitePages/Reviews.aspx .  Please log in using your [StarID]@minnstate.edu and your regular password. All feedback and comments may be submitted and viewed through this site.  Please share this correspondence with your leadership members, constituents, and other appropriate personnel for review and comment.  

·         Board Policy 3.31 Graduate Follow-Up System
·         Board Policy 3.40 Recognition of Veteran Status

Any questions on the policies, or how to leave a comment can be referred to Gary Hunter at gary.hunter@minnstate.edu or 651-201-1659.

Responses are requested by Friday, January 4, 2019.

NOTE: The System Office P&P Review site may be duplicated for your college or university.   If interested in creating your own P&P Review site for your local policies and procedures, submit a ticket through the Cherwell Portal at https://servicedesk.minnstate.edu/CherwellPortal/MNSO?_=242ab6f2#0 requesting your own instance of the P&P Review site.


Tuesday, November 20, 2018

Nov. 15 edition, Pension Issues in the News


NOVEMBER 15, 2018

MINNESOTA NEWS + OPINION

Minneapolis Star Tribune
He joined the Minnesota Revenue Department in 1987, before joining ... He's a good fiduciary and steward of the public employee pension dollars ...

NATIONAL NEWS + OPINION

Bloomberg
... the country; retirement systems representing the Methodist and Roman Catholic churches; and the California Public Employees' Retirement System, ...

Chicago Daily Herald
And it would cost Illinois' public pension funds billions of dollars in capital gains. Divesting from oil and natural gas companies' stocks is a purely ...

Lexington Herald Leader
Last winter, in response to Kentucky's public pension deficit, Gov. Matt Bevin signed into law a bill cutting retirement benefits, most notably by putting ...

PLANSPONSOR
The Center for Retirement Research (CRR) at Boston College, in a new .... the research finds that public employees who have access to retirement ...

CNBC
NEW YORK, Nov 12 (Reuters) - Administrators of some of the country's largest public pension funds have decided they are interested in sustainable ...

Spokane Public Radio
The 401(k) is turning 40. The 401(k) of course is a retirement plan offered by many employers. Roughly 40 percent of American workers use them.

Chief Investment Officer
Untapped public assets such as state lotteries could be used to add “many billions of dollars” of funding to struggling public pension systems, ...

Lexington Herald Leader
It is considered one of the nation's worst-off public pension funds, largely due to years of inadequate contributions by state leaders and unreasonable ...

The Daily Caller
One of the country's biggest public-pension funds succumbed to pressure from activists to divest from private prison companies CoreCivic and GEO ...

MarketWatch
Pensions: Public pensions may have been saved this election. A few gubernatorial candidates had been particularly critical of pension plans, said ...

Louisville Eccentric Observer
Matt Bevin should be praised for working to find a way to fully fund the pensions for public employees, including teachers and first responders.

TriStateHomepage.com
Indiana Public Question One addresses the Balanced Budget Amendment. ... The measure would also require public pension funds to be actuarially ...

KGUN
These changes mean that the old pension system for corrections officer ... Currently, Arizona's Constitution states that benefits for public retirement ...

San Francisco Chronicle
But instead of playing the long game, we have seen an increase in the politicization of public pension funds. From politically advantageous assumed ...

The Detroit News
Lansing – A newly created investment board will oversee Michigan's public retirement fund system that finances pensions and retirement payments for ...

Illinois News Network
The annual required contribution, or ARC, from the state to the five public pension plans it is responsible for was more than $11 billion in 2018, ...

NJ Spotlight
New Jersey still has one of the nation's worst-funded public-employee pension plans despite recent efforts to improve conditions using larger state ...

Thursday, November 8, 2018

Review and Comment under Policy 3.32 College Faculty Credentialing for Proposed Development and/or Revision of Credential Fields and Minimum Qualifications


To:  Presidents, Chief Academic Officers, Chief Student Affairs Officers, Human Resource Directors, MSCF State Leadership

Please review the attached proposed revisions to credential fields and associated minimum qualifications in the following areas:

Taxidermy (proposed to retire field)
Watch and Clockmaking (proposed to retire field)
Cinema (periodic review, no proposed changes)
Judicial Reporting and Broadcast Captioning
Chemical Dependency
Diagnostic Medical Sonography
Health Unit Coordinator (periodic review, no proposed changes)
Medical Laboratory Technology
Occupational Therapy Assistant
American Sign Language (periodic review, no proposed changes)
Sign Language Interpretation and Transliterator
Foreign Language Interpreting (periodic review, no proposed changes)
Biofuels Processing Technology (periodic Review, no proposed changes)
Solar Energy Technology
Wind Energy Technology

I request that you share this correspondence with faculty, administrators and other appropriate staff for review and comment.  All comments and suggestions are welcome from all constituent groups.

Additionally, so that we might review the feedback in a coordinated manner, I request that each chief academic officer submit a single summary response to this review and comment document representing the position of the college administration.  If we do not receive a response providing suggested changes or concerns for consideration, we will assume that the college is in agreement with the proposed revisions of these credential fields and the associated minimum qualifications.

Please refer questions and submit responses by December 3, 2018 to:

Wendy McCance, J.D., Program Director
Minnesota State Colleges and Universities
30 7th St. E., Suite 350
Saint Paul, MN 55101-7804
Phone:  651-201-1768, Fax:  651-632-5018



2018-11-08 Proposed Revised Credential Fields and Minimum Qualifications

AFT President Randi Weingarten on the Ousting of Attorney General Jeff Sessions

For Immediate Release
November 7, 2018

Contact:
Oriana Korin
202-374-6103
okorin@aft.org
www.aft.org

AFT President Randi Weingarten on the Ousting of Attorney General Jeff Sessions

WASHINGTON—“Just one day after the voters sent a Democratic majority to the House of Representatives to put a check on President Trump, he forced out Attorney General Jeff Sessions, naming a replacement, Matthew Whitaker, who is on the record criticizing the Mueller investigation.

“We are entering a dangerous moment, where the president is putting his thumb on the scale, evidently to thwart the independent investigation into his own behavior.

“No one should be above the law in America; this is a democracy, not an autocracy or a dictatorship. When elected officials govern based on personal vendettas, they pose a direct threat to the balance of justice in our country.

“Congress warned the president against this, and he has continued to act with the most reckless impunity we have ever seen from a person holding this office.

“How do we teach our students to obey rules when President Trump is showing them that they don’t have to? How can we, in good conscience, preach about democracy when the leader of our country shows contempt for the very foundation of our democratic values?

“We, the people, will be the ones who try to hold the president accountable, while at the same time asking both what remains of the current Congress, as well as the newly elected Congress, to do the same. AFT members and leaders will take to the streets and join actions happening all around the country tomorrow at 5 p.m. EST, to make clear that Matthew Whitaker is not an appropriate person to oversee the Russia investigation.”

Thursday, November 1, 2018

AFT and Civil Rights, Faith, Progressive and Community Leaders Host ‘United to Reject Hate’ and GOTV Call with 20,000 Activists

For Immediate Release
October 31, 2018

Contact:
Marcus Mrowka
202-531-0689
mmrowka@aft.org
www.aft.org

AFT and Civil Rights, Faith, Progressive and Community Leaders Host ‘United to Reject Hate’ and GOTV Call with 20,000 Activists

WASHINGTON—Last night, more than 22,000 AFT members, activists, progressive leaders, civil rights leaders and faith leaders joined a national telephone town hall to discuss how, in the wake of political, racist and anti-Semitic attacks, communities are uniting to reject hate and violence and working to get out the vote. The Unite to Reject Hate and GOTV national town hall was hosted by the American Federation of Teachers with more than 30 partners participating. Rabbi Sharon Kleinbaum concluded the town hall with a prayer of healing, unity and justice.

Partner Statements

AFT President Randi Weingarten:

“Hateful rhetoric and words of incitement have fueled heinous acts of violence across our nation over the past week—pipe bombs mailed to elected officials and the media, a shooting at Kroger after a failed church attack, another school shooting, and the deadliest anti-Semitic attack in our nation’s history. Political violence that once seemed unimaginable now seems inevitable—the result of hate being normalized and divisions stoked by those in power. This is a moment of crisis for our communities that we have not experienced in decades. We are in pain; but our pain can’t immobilize us. We must act. The most important thing we can do right now is to vote. If anything about what is happening in our country bothers you—vote. This election is a choice between cruelty and decency, fairness and prejudice, democracy and autocracy. We the people can vote for change.”

U.S. Rep. James Clyburn (remarks from the town hall):

“The goodness of this great country is on the ballot this year. We have to get people to understand that this year’s election will be more consequential than any in the last few generations.”

NAACP President Derrick Johnson (remarks from the town hall):

“The election cycle is about the hate we’ve seen in the last week, it is about the loss of civility in our political discourse. And most importantly this election will define democracy in our country for the next 15 years. Turnout is crucial.”

NARAL Pro-Choice America President Ilyse Hogue:

“Words have meaning and consequences. And those from the president and his allies over the last few weeks have been beyond dangerous. It is a danger that we in the women’s rights and reproductive freedom world have sadly experienced firsthand. We know that violent rhetoric directly leads to heightened violence. They want us to live in fear. They want us to be paralyzed by fear. But we can’t afford that. This nation can’t afford that. Their path to victory is fear. Our path to victory is overcoming that fear, overcoming the hatred, overcoming the violence.”

For Our Future Action Fund CEO Justin Myers:

“For Our Future is proud to stand shoulder to shoulder with our allies and reject hate and violence. Our communities deserve and need a government that represents us all instead of a fringe faction. For Our Future remains committed to fighting for justice for all communities.”

MoveOn Senior Advisor and National Spokesperson Karine Jean-Pierre:

“A large and growing majority is alarmed at the direction this country has taken. We reject division and hate. We are fighting for a better future—one in which everyone is respected, and in which everyone can thrive. We are energized, we are mobilized, and we are determined to make our voices heard at the ballot box Nov. 6.”

Voto Latino President Maria Teresa Kumar:

“This midterm election is a referendum on our values and priorities. Americans are flooding the ballot box and turning out in record numbers this midterm. Latinx voters are no exception. Through the Somos Mas campaign that Voto Latino launched to register 1 million voters by 2020, we’ve already shattered our goal for this year, registering 200,000 voters and counting. This is what those who peddle hate for political expediency fear—they know that when our community is motivated and organized, we can collectively right the direction of our country. Our call to action: It’s not enough to vote; pledge to take a friend.”

Coalition of Labor Union Women President Elise Bryant:

“The time is now, the place is here. Together we will stop the cycle of fear with the unstoppable force of love and solidarity. We will march, we will sing, we will get out the vote for ‘liberty and justice for all’!”

United States Hispanic Leadership Institute President Dr. Juan Andrade Jr:

“The number of people spewing hate is growing daily and fueling acts of violence, and we must unite to diffuse the effects of hatemongering speech. To paraphrase Voltaire, ‘If a person can make you believe absurdities, a person can drive you to commit atrocities.’ We must unite to stop such speech and violence from spreading in America, and let’s show the world that hatemongers don’t speak for us. We’re better than this.”

Human Rights Campaign Senior Vice President for Policy and Political Affairs JoDee Winterhof:

“Tragedies like Saturday’s anti-Semitic attack in Pittsburgh or the recent shooting at a Kroger grocery don’t happen in a vacuum; they often intersect with vile hatred and bigotry that has been mainstreamed and allowed to fester. The LGBTQ community knows too well the danger and destruction that can occur when an unstable individual, who has been conditioned to hate, gains easy access to military-style weapons, and our hearts are with all those impacted by the recent, tragic spate of violence. But we cannot remain silent. As a society, we must turn our anger into action by holding accountable lawmakers and other public officials who vilify and scapegoat marginalized communities through hateful rhetoric and legislation, because they are complicit in the violence fueled by their words and actions. We need leadership now. We need leaders who will reject the politics of hate and fear, rather than fuel divisive rhetoric that could result in more senseless attacks or deaths. We must continue to demand action until our lawmakers hear us—and we must make our voices heard at the ballot box on Nov. 6 and elect new lawmakers who will.”

UltraViolet Co-Founder and Executive Director Shaunna Thomas:

“As our communities mourn a series of vile acts of right-wing terrorism, we mourn with them. But we will not let acts of hate divide and intimidate us. Together, we must reject this hate, and come Nov. 6, we will do so at the ballot box.”

AFT member and Stoneman Douglas High School teacher Sarah Lerner:

“As an English and journalism teacher and yearbook adviser at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla., I’m unbelievably proud of the students at my school. They have taken the event that happened and immediately enacted advocacy and change. They created the March for Our Lives, Students for Change, and the Student Gun Violence Summit. And they have used their voices to show strength and truth in their journalism and reporting. We all continue to fight for the 17 Eagles we lost on 2/14.”

Full List of Partners

African American Leadership Council
American Federation of Teachers
American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee
Asian Pacific American Labor Alliance
Black Women’s Roundtable
Board of Hispanic Caucus Chairs
Center for Popular Democracy
Coalition of Labor Union Women
Congregation Beit Simchat Torah (New York City)
Congressional Hispanic Caucus Institute
Emerge America
For Our Future
Hispanic Federation
Hispanic Heritage Foundation
Human Rights Campaign
Labor Council for Latin American Advancement
League of United Latin American Citizens
MANA, a National Latina Organization
MomsRising
MoveOn
NAACP
NARAL Pro-Choice America
National Coalition on Black Civic Participation
National Council of Negro Women
National Domestic Workers Alliance
National Immigration Law Center
Partnership for Working Families
Pride at Work
Rainbow PUSH Coalition
UltraViolet
UndocuBlack Network
United States Hispanic Leadership Institute
Voto Latino