Give Ohio workers a choice
Ohio public employees de- serve a choice about union membership. As an employee of YSU, I was forced for many years to pay union dues simply to keep my job. In many Ohio communities, school teachers, firefighters, police and others are in the same boat.
At a time when Ohio’s citizens need every cent they earn, many are compelled by law to send part of their wages — our tax dollars — to out-of-state union bosses.
Voting yes on Issue 2 will give public employees a choice. They can join a union and support it, or they can reject it, as their consciences dictate. The union bosses, of course, want to protect their cash flow and prevent that choice by saturating the air waves with misleading advertising.
Please do what’s right for Ohio by supporting freedom to choose. Please join me in voting yes on Issue 2.
Herbert K. McMath, Hudson
Collective bargaining is important
The purpose of this let- ter is to let the voters of Ohio know that Senate Bill 5 must go down to defeat to protect collective bargaining rights for workers that include those who are fighting for safer staffing levels, training, critical safety equipment, partners in high-risk patrols for people and safety officers in our schools.
Public employees did not go into their jobs to get a big paycheck. As a 35-year veteran retired Ohio school teacher, I can say this from experience.
We chose our careers to help people. Many of these jobs have taken years of extra training. Many of these jobs place the employees in harm’s way. And we, the citizens, benefit from this. Let us help our police, firefighters, teachers, nurses, and all public employees do their jobs by voting no on Issue 2.
In all my years of teaching, I never saw any board of education say, “We are going to give you all a raise.” If it had not been for collective bargaining, we as teachers would never had an increase in salary helping us to support our family and many other community activities
Marlin Spellman, Ashtabula
Protecting village 24 hours a day
The New Middletown Vil- lage mayor, council and police department are asking voters to approve a two-year 2-mill police levy. It will continue funding for 24-hour police protection at an average annual cost of $64 for the owner of a $100,000 home. It will generate $47,000 a year. The police department was awarded two Ohio Criminal Justice Grants in the previous years to fund 24-hour patrols for the first time in the history of the village.
During the last two years the village has observed a decrease in property and juvenile crimes and an increase in arrests for impaired driving, weapons, drugs and wanted persons. The proactive stance taken by the police department continues to provide the residents and businesses of New Middletown a safe community in which to live, raise families and succeed in business.
The police department provides a school resource officer who interacts daily with the children of our school district, mediating problems and concerns from within the school, conducting follow up programs at homes and creating a safe school environment for our children.
In the last two years the community has experienced an armed home invasion, kidnapping, armed robbery and meth lab, and a significant increase in drug activity, along with the unscrupulous criminal element associated with those crimes. Your support is vitally important in providing a professional police agency with a mission of protecting and providing one of the safest communities to live in Mahoning County. My office and the village police officers encourage you to vote yes on the New Middletown police levy.
Chief Vincent D’Egidio, New Middletown
Libraries are a blessing
After my husband retired from the U.S.A.F. in 1987, we returned to our hometown of Bristolville. It is interesting to think back and realize that one of the first places we returned to in Bristol was our public library. My husband and I grew up with the convenience and privilege of going to the Bristol Public Library, which is located next door to the Bristol Local School.
With each move that we made during our years in the Air Force, locating the nearest library was high on our list of things to do. We introduced our children at early ages to the services that the libraries offered.
Bristol was blessed to have an Andrew Carnegie building given to this township in 1912. The placement of the library in Bristol is conducive to the surrounding townships in northern Trumbull County, and many of our patrons live in these surrounding townships.
Bristol Public Library at this time is facing a decrease in funding from the state of Ohio for its operating expenses. The board of trustees of Bristol Public Library has decided to put a 1-mill levy on the Bristol ballot in November.
I’m writing this letter to encourage the residents of Bristol Township to support the library levy (approximate cost, $30 a year per household) by voting yes in November.
Donna J. Holko, Bristolville
What’s the word for all this?
For quite a while now I have been searching for a word to characterize the economic, political, and military mess our country is in. That word is shame.
Belated shame on our previous president for lying to us and getting us into two unfunded wars. Current shame on President Obama for his slow extraction of our troops from Iraq and for escalating the quagmire in Afghanistan. Continuing shame on the party of no, the Republicans, who have thwarted every economic initiative proposed by Obama. A lesser amount, but still some shame applies to many gutless Democrats who have failed to back up Obama.
Shame on Republican governors, especially Scott Walker of Wisconsin and John Kasich of Ohio, for their union-busting legislation.
Shame on that poor excuse for a senator from Kentucky, minority “leader” Mitch McConnell. Here is a man who proclaimed from January of 2009 that his sole priority was not working to reduce unemployment, ending our wars, building a better tax structure, but to make Obama a one-term president. And how about some shame on Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Corbett, who would like to emulate his counterparts in Ohio and Wisconsin in deconstructing public education and other public services in Pennsylvania.
Big-time shame on the super rich, the big banks, Wall Street, the big untaxed corporations like GE, all of whom have no conscience and continue to accept huge bonuses and have Congress in their back pockets. Lastly, shame on ourselves for electing to Congress and state legislatures the kind of people who got us into our mess.
Frank Frankovich, Hermitage, Pa.
The waste of a greenhouse
The greenhouse in Board- man is scheduled for demo. It seems to me that it would be an ideal place to produce food, year round.
With the increase in gas drilling, it could be feasible to make a deal with a drilling company to drill a well and provide the fuel needed to heat the greenhouse in cold weather. Opening the greenhouse would provide jobs and produce food such as herbs, spices, tomatoes and other crops and flowers.
Schools could start agriculture classes and county jails could provide cheap labor. With world population increasing, tillable land in a few years will not provide the food needed.
Bruce Wilkins, Boardman
Comments
BYE BYE sb5
Vote NO on issue 2.
What’s more clear with Employment report is that when it comes to joblessness, having a college degree is more important than ever that is why we need the help of "High Speed Universities" now
"The police department provides a school resource officer who interacts daily with the children of our school district, mediating problems and concerns from within the school, conducting follow up programs at homes and creating a safe school environment for our children."
Gee Chief I wonder if this police officer also queries the "Children" as to what items mommy and daddy might have in their night stand next to their bed and if daddy or mommy own any guns or just how often mommy and daddy yell at one another??
Haven't we already lost enough freedoms in the name of safety? Put your officers on the street where they belong not in the "Homemaking Class"
A "YES on Issue 2" would surely aid in that decision.
Herb,
When the union gets a pay raise, did you? Did you say to your boss, no thank you to that raise? NO you didn't! that gets me, people say no to unions, yet they gladly take the bennies the union bargained for so many years ago.
Public labor strikes are so far and few between anymore, people working today don't understand what was fought not so long ago. The poor working conditions that private labor had 100 years ago was public life 25 years ago. Young people, wake up and listen to those that have been trough it not so long ago. Unless you are willing to go backward and maybe lose you home in the burbs and move back into YOUNGSTOWN!!!!
VOTE NO ON SB5
Herb: The part of your comment about freedom to join a union or not is ABSOLUTELY FALSE!!! If SB5 in approved, 1/3 of public safety forces will be FORCED OUT OF THE UNION, AND BECOME MANAGENENT!!! Don't believe me, read the bill! Then, the older employees will be displaced because why? BECAUSE THEN CAN!!! SB5 gives goverment leverage to ELIMINATE who they choose, and can give no anwser because they don't have to!! Again, the pro SB5 sending MISLEADING, FALSE INFORMATION TO THE PUBLIC!!! Is this the kind of socialist goverment you want? Always lying to the masses? I DON'T! VOTE NO ON ISSUE 2 This law is a 300 page( why does it have to be 300 pages?) misleading law full of goverment loopholes and land mines developed to screw the middle class!!!!YOU THINK IT'S ALL GOOD? WAIT UNTIL IT AFFECTS YOU!!!
Herb...It was your choice to apply for employment with an institution that employs union workers just like it was their choice to employ those union workers.
Union membership is a requirement of the institution not the union. If you don't want to belong to a union I suggest you apply with employers that don't require union membership.
I wonder if the unionized proponent (Vote Yes) onIssue 2 turns down any wage increases or benefit packages he enjoys as a result of his "forced" membership.
You younger, less senior public sector union members had better think twice about Issue 2. If it fails, you're the ones who are going to be laid off, not your senior union brothers, who wouldn't even agree to reasonable concessions to keep you on the payroll. In fact, your senior union brothers will be better off with you gone because it increases their chances for overtime pay. You can tell them what they want to hear now but use your head when you go in that voting booth and close the curtain. Save your job. Vote YES on issue 2!
Scare tactics are not going to work. sb5 will only hurt the workers, not management and administration. That is why sb5 is HORRIBLE for Ohio. Horrible for the working class.
SB5 Must go away
sb5 will go away
Vote NO on issue 2
Herb,
You speak the truth. Which is why I now many current and former public employees who will be voting FOR SB 5.
My question to the other posters who are asking if Herb was benefitted by the Unions. Why can't Herb negotiate his own contract? Maybe he was/is an above average professor. Maybe on his own he would have been able to get himself a better deal. Maybe take less in the way of salary, but come out ahead because he doesn't have to pay union dues.
WOODY,
You and herb have choices. Take a job in a non-union place if you don't like union shops! No one forced you to apply there, and later accept employement . Go stand on you on two feet and have someone accuse you of something and see what it costs you to defend yourself. I look as unions as an insurance policy that I hope I never need, yet gladly pay for each year.
VOTE NO ON SB5!!!!!!
I never said I was Union. I am proudly non-Union. I am a 53%er.
I know people because of their choosen professions were forced to join Unions. They did not have a choice. Tell me how someone who wants to be a firefighter, police officer, teacher, can do so without being forced into joining a Union?