We reported exclusively in May that the National Education Association planned to cut $50 million from its budget, anticipating that it would lose 300,000 members in the wake of a Supreme Court decision ruling agency fees unconstitutional.
NEA’s national headquarters took in $385 million last year, and its proposed two-year budget will affect virtually every aspect of operations. Vacant staff positions will go unfilled, leading to a reduction of 16 percent of spending on compensation. No layoffs are planned.
Spending on travel will be cut 4 percent. Publication costs cut 27 percent. Office expenses cut 15 percent. And so on.
Even the national union’s largest and most important expense, cash grants to its state and local affiliates, will be cut by 9 percent.
But one line item in the budget will actually increase: salaries for the union’s executive officers.
The base salary for NEA president Lily Eskelsen GarcĂa will increase to $293,434. NEA’s vice president and secretary-treasurer will each receive $257,954. Additionally, all three executive officers receive cash allowances equal to 40 percent of their base salary — at least $103,182 each — to cover benefits and living expenses.
Education, politics, and anything else that catches my attention.
Thursday, July 12, 2018
Those Selfless Union Leaders
The Janus decision is going to take a bite out of union coffers, so what do they do? Plan for budget cuts, of course. Oh, and give union leaders a pay raise:
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