Parking Violations
The Oct. 23, 2007, edition of the MIRS Capitol Capsule (www.mirsnews.com –
subscription required) reported that state representatives John Stahl, R – North
Branch, and Mike Nofs, R – Battle Creek, were stripped of their
climate-controlled underground parking spots beneath their legislative office
building and relocated to outdoor surface parking spots behind the capitol
building across the street.
With regard to Rep. Stahl, the article speculated that the change of
assignment was done because the lawmaker did not support "some elements" of the
budget agreement that passed with great acrimony just over three weeks earlier,
and that Speaker of the House Andy Dillon, D – Redford Twp., was removing the
parking spot as an act of retribution.
A spokesman for the Speaker’s office was asked about the matter by MIRS and
declined to comment.
Sicko
Public school teachers in the Jackson County area take an average of eight
days off for illnesses or personal leave, according to a Jan. 20, 2008, feature
story in the Jackson Citizen-Patriot (www.citpat.com). The paper notes this is
nearly twice the rate for other professions nationally and 4.3 percent of their
required work days. Labor contracts in most of the districts examined allow for
twelve such absences per teacher annually. The analysis did not examine
additional days off taken for long-term paid illnesses, maternity leave, or
those for business and union-related purposes.
The Jackson County-area absentee rate is slightly lower than national average
of nine-to-ten sick days annually for teachers, according to a recent National
Bureau of Economic Research report cited in the newspaper story. At just under
ten days per teacher each year, the Jackson Public Schools had the highest rate
of any district in the survey. The district superintendent is quoted as saying
that some of his younger teachers have come to view these days as alternative
vacation days and speculates that they might be less likely to use them if they
had to ask for permission from a superior rather than use automated telephone
and internet-based systems to announce that they are not coming to work.
A teachers’ union official interviewed for the article cited the prevalence
of greater illness among so many young children, which then places teachers at
greater risk of infection, as a likely culprit for the additional sick days. One
of those teachers of younger kids, an instructor for second graders in the
Jackson Public Schools, is quoted as saying, "We don’t get paid for (not taking)
them, I might as well use a few of them." The paper states that the Jackson
Public Schools racked up 4,448 sick and personal leave days during the 2006-07
school year, at a cost of $419,337 to pay the substitutes.
Big Game Politics
State Rep. Lorence Wenke, R – Richland, fancies himself a "Republican problem
solver, not an ideologue," according to MIRS. To this end, the lawmaker has a
grey model of a rhino perched atop his desk on the floor of the state House of
Representatives. The article states that Wenke is sometimes tagged as a RINO –
Republican In Name Only – and the model could symbolize the perception that the
lawmaker sometimes doesn’t fit in with either the Democratic "donkeys" or the
Republican "elephants."
Wenke says the prop represents hypocritical fiscal conservatism on the
elephants’ side of the aisle. Noting a bill proposal of his that would pare back
legislator health benefits and over time could potentially save more than a
billion dollars, the lawmaker is disappointed that his bill has only seven or
eight signatures from his friends in the Republican caucus who he says "talk
about really saving taxpayer money."
The rhino was a present from Rep. Chris Ward, R – Brighton, who in turn
received it from his staff after he too was accused of being a RINO following a
vote in favor of an income tax increase last fall.
Pricey Promises
"Michigan faces a substantial bill coming due for health care benefits for
retired state employees, and even greater costs are likely to emerge for retired
teachers," according to a 50-state analysis of states’ retiree benefit
obligations produced by the Pew Charitable Trusts. The report, titled "Promises
with a Price," notes that Michigan’s set-aside for non-pension benefits such as
retiree health care was more than 99 percent unfunded as of 2006. With a bill
coming due of more than $8 billion, the state had socked away just $60 million.
The Kaiser Family Foundation’s 2007 Annual Survey of Employer Health Benefits
reveals that providing a health insurance benefit to employees who have retired
is rare in the private sector. Of large firms that offer health insurance to
their current employees – those with 200 or more employees – just 33 percent
also extend health insurance to their former workers. The figure is just 5
percent for smaller firms with fewer than 200 employees.
The Michigan Public School Employee Retirement System includes a
post-retirement health care benefit. The MPSERS benefits website refers to it as
"one of the best public pensions around."