Pubdate: Sat, 03 Sep 2011 Source: Peoria Journal Star (IL) Copyright: 2011sPeoria Journal Star Contact: http://pjstar.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/338 LESS THAN SATISFACTORY CONCLUSION TO ILLINI BLUFFS TEACHER STRIKE As is often the case the whole thing ended not with a bang but a whimper, with the union and the School Board at Illini Bluffs District 327 each giving a little on the contract dispute over random drug testing, bringing teachers back to work after eight days on strike. It's good to see the teachers back in the classroom with students, where they belong, but on the constitutional question that had kept them out, well, this is not the most satisfactory resolution. As it stands the 58 teachers currently in the Illini Bluffs Federation of Teachers will not be subject to mandatory, arbitrary testing, though they're free to volunteer a urine sample, which borders on funny for all the participation that will encourage. However, any teachers hired after Aug. 15 of this year - no one has been so far - will be obligated to hand over a body fluid on the whim of the administration, which may very well make them unique among the more than 130,000 teachers who toil in Illinois. Alas, they always eat their young. The school district also can test for cause, the legitimacy of which no one really questions. Beyond that, the three-year contract contains raises of 2, 1 and 2 percent, respectively, which had been previously agreed upon. As far as this page was concerned the issue was never about compensation but civil liberties, specifically the Fourth Amendment protection against "unreasonable" search and seizure, which is priceless and which suspicionless testing arguably would have violated. Alas, that has been negotiated away, for now. What's done is done. Interestingly, in something of a statement, all 58 teachers were tested, with their permission, for the presence of illegal drugs a little more than a week ago, and according to the union all of them passed. Apparently the School Board's concern here was much ado about nothing. The district did succeed, however, in sowing doubt about the sobriety of its staff to the public at large. A number of letter writers to this newspaper have already concluded that drug addicts populate the place. Hey, if it wasn't a problem, then why would the School Board have insisted upon testing? Hard to unring that bell. Job well done. One does not wish to be too hard on the teachers. Indeed, it's easy to say they should have continued taking a stand and walking the picket line when you're not the one with a paycheck at risk. As it is teachers will pay something of a strike penalty costing each of them between $400 and $1,000. It's just that when you compromise on constitutional rights, the side that wants to erode them inevitably comes back for more, while encouraging others to come aboard. As such Illini Bluffs should consider itself a pioneer. It may be the first here but it will not be the last. The School Board's attorney had earlier indicated that testing students would be "the next step," and so it snowballs. Over time teachers in Illini Bluffs will retire, and the school district will seek to replace them, likely with those fresh out of college. It would serve Illini Bluffs right if young teachers with options gave the district a double take where employment is concerned, on principle alone. Why work there if you can work someplace else that respects the Constitution? It's unfortunate that there are kids in the middle of all this. As indicated in this space before, it all depends on what kind of country you want to live in. Too many Americans just don't get what a special place this nation is - or was - anymore. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr.