Teachers want Blue Shield now
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Suzie Harrison
The Laguna Beach Unified School District office’s parking lot
attracted swarms of teachers concerned about their benefits well
before the scheduled school board meeting on Tuesday.
Teachers from El Morro, Thurston, Top of the World and Laguna
Beach High School were buzzing about the impending insurance issue,
and they came prepared, passing out scripts and stickers that read
“Blue Shield Now.”
Once the doors finally opened a little past 7 p.m., it was
standing-room only. .
Dave Dixon, a teacher at Thurston Middle School for 15 years,
addressed the board first.
“Tonight, we’re asking you for adequate health care coverage,”
Dixon began.
Negotiation with the district had been adversarial, negative and
dismissive, and threatened to leave teachers as the only employees in
the district with the costly CCN medical insurance provider plan, he
said. In November, it was agreed that Blue Shield was the better
alternative, Dixon said.
He said that while the administration received bonuses and raises,
what was proposed to the teachers added up to a lower standard of
living. The two systems of compensation and benefits were overtly
unfair, he said.
“We need to move to Blue Shield now and achieve immediately the
goal that you move us with the other employee groups,” Dixon said to
the board. “You’ve never been disrespectful. We need you to
intervene. Had you been to one of those [negotiation] meetings, you
would have.”
His message was greeted with long applause from the concerned
teachers.
Marilyn Beauchemin, who has been teaching at El Morro for 20 years
and is also on the negotiating team, echoed the group’s fears.
“I know [CCN] is in trouble,” Beauchemin said. “I’m very concerned
to go back to the table and iron out our differences.”
A stream of teachers spoke with the same concerns.
Dawn Mirone, president of the Laguna Beach Unified Faculty Assn.,
said the good thing is that the board made a public pledge to the
teachers that it would not be uninsured, which was the main issue and
something they had been negotiating since September.
“We’ve been investigating switching to Blue Shield from our
current plan,” Mirone said. “The teachers were ready to move in
November 2003.”
On Tuesday, the board was set to approve the Blue Shield plan for
all administrators and classified staff and leave the teachers with
CCN, she said.
“Everyone has been on the same insurance plan and same increase in
salary until four years ago, when the superintendent and board
started to restructure,” Mirone said.
The board wanted to move to Blue Shield because it compared it to
the current plan and saw that there were short- and long-term savings
to the district if it was used, she said.
The district told teachers that the small pool at CCN is going out
of business, Mirone said.
“It started out with five different districts,” Mirone said.
“Slowly but surely, the other districts are pulling out of CCN.”
Their fear is that the plan will become insolvent and they won’t
be insured anymore.
“The problem surfaced when the district team demanded that we cut
our benefits, that the teachers pay an undetermined amount into the
benefits,” Mirone said. “It would be what the annual benefit increase
would be and would be picked up by the employees [teachers].”
The board thought it was too indefinite to pay an unspecified
amount each month, Mirone said. The district proposed to offset the
rise in healthcare costs with a half-percent salary increase, which
Mirone said amounted to about $300 a year for the average teacher.
“It concerned us because the district is so financially healthy,
fortunately,” Mirone said. “They saw an 11% increase in property tax
this year in the district alone.”
Last year saw the same increase, and next year should be even
greater, she said.
“The average administrative raise, not including the
superintendent, has been nearly 40% since 2000,” Mirone said. “These
raises are dwarfed by the superintendents. Just in straight salary
alone, her base pay has risen 56% in five years. She is one of the
highest paid superintendents in the state.”
Assistant Supt. Steven Keller said Thursday morning that the
teacher’s union and the district negotiation team would be meeting on
March 17.
“The district continues to be optimistic that we will come to
consensus regarding the health benefits issue and the other issues
addressed in the negotiating process,” Keller said.
Some of the information Mirone shared was inaccurate, Keller said.
“Never has the district attempted to compromise or discontinue
health benefits for the 2003-04 school year,” Keller said. “Cost
containment regarding health benefits will benefit everyone.”
He said that Supt. Theresa Daem and the board appreciated and
respected the teachers’ voices at the meeting on Tuesday.
“The district agrees with their motto that read ‘Blue Shield
Now,’” Keller said. “I would implore all of our teachers to compare
health benefit packages with any Orange County school district.”
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