Click here to learn about the D.C. Teachers Union
United Teachers Los Angeles supports merit pay “on a cold day in hell
The Detroit Federation of Teachers shut down city schools to stop 15 charter schools from being built for free
The California Teachers Association has compared school vouchers to child prostitution
The Washington Teachers Union has withheld kids’ college recommendations for parents who didn’t oppose school reform
In Illinois (outside of Chicago), two union-protected teachers out of 95,500 are terminated for incompetence annually
In Illinois (outside of Chicago), it costs $219,504.21 to fire a bad union-protected teacher
In New Jersey, five union-protected teachers out of more than 100,000 are terminated for incompetence annually
In New York State, seventeen union-protected teachers are terminated a year
In New York State, it costs $128,941 to fire a bad union-protected teacher
In New York City, only ten out of 55,000 tenured teachers were terminated in 2006-2007
In Los Angeles, only eleven out of 43,000 union-protected teachers are even considered for termination annually
The National Education Association received $50 million for shaky investment advice in 2004 alone
NEA members are suing over the union’s endorsement of “Valuebuilder,” a plan with over $1 billion of members’ money invested
New York State United Teachers received $3 million for shaky investment advice in 2005
Washington Teachers Union embezzlement tab: $5 million
United Teachers of Dade (Miami) embezzlement tab: $2.5 million
Massachusetts Teachers Association embezzlement tab: $800,000
Michigan teachers unions' embezzlement tab from one thief: $218,000 in bad checks
 
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North Carolina

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National Council on Teacher Quality Report Card: North Carolina Teacher Policy

Legend

Best practices.Best practices.
State meets goal.State meets goal.
State nearly meets goal.State nearly meets goal.
State partially meets goal.State partially meets goal.
State meets a small part of goal.State meets a small part of goal.
State does not meet goal.State does not meet goal.
Full Report – National Council on Teacher Quality

Meeting NCLB Teacher Quality Objectives: C

State nearly meets goal.Goal A Equitable Distribution of Teachers
State partially meets goal.Goal B Elementary Teacher Preparation
State meets a small part of goal.Goal C Secondary Teacher Preparation
State meets goal.Goal D Veteran Teachers Path to HQT
State does not meet goal.Goal E Standardizing Credentials

Teacher Licensure: D

State partially meets goal.Goal A Defining Professional Knowledge
State does not meet goal.Goal B Meaningful Licenses
State nearly meets goal.Goal C Interstate Portability
State does not meet goal.Goal D Teacher Prep in Reading Instruction
State does not meet goal.Goal E Distinguishing Promising Teachers

Teacher Evaluation and Compensation: C

State partially meets goal.Goal A Evaluating Teacher Effectiveness
State partially meets goal.Goal B Using Value-Added
State meets a small part of goal.Goal C Teacher Evaluation
State partially meets goal.Goal D Compensation Reform
State partially meets goal.Goal E Tenure

State Approval of Teacher Preparation Programs: C

State meets goal.Goal A Entry Into Preparation Programs
State partially meets goal.Goal B Program Accountability
State does not meet goal.Goal C Program Approval and Accreditation
State does not meet goal.Goal D Controlling Coursework Creep

Alternate Routes to Certification: D

State does not meet goal.Goal A Genuine Alternatives
State partially meets goal.Goal B Limiting Alternate Routes to Teachers with Strong Credentials
State does not meet goal.Goal C Program Accountability
State meets a small part of goal.Goal D Interstate Portability

Preparation of Special Education Teachers: D

State nearly meets goal.Goal A Special Education Teacher Preparation
State does not meet goal.Goal B Elementary Special Education Teachers
State does not meet goal.Goal C Secondary Special Education Teachers
State does not meet goal.Goal D Special Education Teacher and HQT

Political contribution statistics from 2004 political cycle.

No political contributions from unions reported in this state.

In North Carolina, after 3 years, public school teachers receive what's commonly called "tenure," a special employment protection that teachers unions defend. As the below federal statistics indicate, tenured teachers (as opposed to less-senior "probationary" teachers) are practically impossible to fire.

0.6%
tenured/post-probationary
teacher firing rate
0.3%
probationary teacher firing rate
9.8%
private school teacher firing rate (national)

Data obtained from the Department of Education's 2007-2008 Schools and Staffing Survey.


Statewide Unions

NEA Union

North Carolina Association of Educators
Total Revenue: $ 9,238,704
Total Expenses: $ 9,170,283
Total Assets: $ 6,072,844

AFT Union

AFT North Carolina
Total Revenue: $ 32,050
Total Expenses: $ 23,354
Total Assets: $ 27,098

Data obtained from the Internal Revenue Service's Master Data File 2005-2006.


Other Unions

Name City Total Rev. Tax Period
North Carolina Association Of Educators Raleigh $ 9,238,704 2003
Federal Education Association Fayetteville $ 1,855,776 2004
Federal Education Association-pacific Fayetteville $ 857,642 2004
Federal Education Association-state Side Region Fayetteville $ 827,678 2004
American Educators Association Of Okinawa Fayetteville $ 272,405 2000
American Federation Of Teachers Pittsboro $ 63,079 2002
American Federation Of Teachers Of North Carolina Kure Beach $ 32,050 2004

FOIAFor this massive new project, the Center for Union Facts filed freedom of information requests with dozens of America’s major school districts.

 From the stacks of paperwork that ensued, we have calculated a variety of statistics that document how teachers unions – and the laws and policies they defend – keep bad teachers in classrooms. Read on to discover just what all that dues money pays for in many cities around the country.

 

Wake NCAE: Protecting Bad Teachers

Wake NCAE counts as its members teachers from the Wake County Public School System, the public school district for Raleigh and the surrounding area. According to school district records, however, policies defended by Wake NCAE and its parent organization, the North Carolina Association of Educators (the state affiliate of the National Education Association, the nation's largest teachers union), mean that practically no teachers are ever fired by the school system.

The Wake County Public School System has about 4,220 teachers with "career" contracts ("career" status is available once a teacher has been in the system for four years, and it is enshrined in a state law defended stridently by Wake NCAE and its parent organization). Original research by the Center for Union Facts into school district records indicates that, between the 2003-04 and the 2006-07 school years, not a single "career" teacher was fired by the district.

Moreover, in that same time period only six probationary (pre-"career", meaning that their contracts must be renewed to continue their employment) teachers did not have their contracts renewed, out of a pool of about 3,733 probationary teachers. That's little more than one per year, or an annual rate of 0.04 percent. Since it takes four years to get "career" status in North Carolina's public school districts, that statistic suggests that only about 0.16 percent of probationary teachers are taken out of schools before getting tenure.

It's easy to believe that the vast majority of Wake County's public schoolteachers are doing a good job, but it's a near-impossibility that all 4,220 career teachers deserve to be in front of kids; any group of people that size is bound to have at least a few bad apples. The best explanation, in our opinion, is that by protecting an outmoded employment system, the state and local teachers organizations have made it nearly impossible to fire bad teachers.

Source: Wake County Schools; Tharrington Smith LLP
Data current as of December 17, 2007