taft2012
10-24-2012, 06:40 AM
Members of the union representing Queens Library workers are suing the library officials for refusing to give them copies of minutes from Board of Trustees meetings.
Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/queens/unions-sues-queens-library-article-1.1190521#ixzz2ADNZUfQo
OK, I've been working for the city for a long time myself, and in the interest of full disclosure I too belong to a municipal union, but...LIBRARIANS? Really?
Aren't librarians supposed to be old ladies supplementing their Social Security with a mindless minimum wage job of "shushing" people and putting books back on shelves?
When did being a librarian become a career choice requiring the protections of a union? I wonder if this union also covers the librarians that work in the public school system, which would probably amount to approximately 3000 unionized librarians in the city's 1400 school buildings alone. All told, the population of New York City's unionized librarians could be greater than the entire population of some American towns.
As things currently stand in NYC, half of the students do not graduate high school. Combine that with the new digital age, and obviously the books are just sitting, collecting dust. Yet we have a union advocating for our unionized librarians.
*THIS* is the madness of municipal unions.
Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/queens/unions-sues-queens-library-article-1.1190521#ixzz2ADNZUfQo
OK, I've been working for the city for a long time myself, and in the interest of full disclosure I too belong to a municipal union, but...LIBRARIANS? Really?
Aren't librarians supposed to be old ladies supplementing their Social Security with a mindless minimum wage job of "shushing" people and putting books back on shelves?
When did being a librarian become a career choice requiring the protections of a union? I wonder if this union also covers the librarians that work in the public school system, which would probably amount to approximately 3000 unionized librarians in the city's 1400 school buildings alone. All told, the population of New York City's unionized librarians could be greater than the entire population of some American towns.
As things currently stand in NYC, half of the students do not graduate high school. Combine that with the new digital age, and obviously the books are just sitting, collecting dust. Yet we have a union advocating for our unionized librarians.
*THIS* is the madness of municipal unions.