A Common Pleas Court judge this week dismissed a lawsuit
against the Philadelphia School District and its teachers' union that tried to
end a long-held practice of allowing union employees to remain on the public
payroll.
Judge Linda Carpenter ruled Wednesday that the
Harrisburg-based group Americans for Fair Treatment did not have standing to
pursue its complaint.
The group, represented by the nonprofit Fairness Center,
alleged that the practice was illegal, even though the Philadelphia Federation
of Teachers pays the workers' salaries and benefits.
The Fairness Center alleged that the arrangement was an
unconstitutional use of public money for private work.
The teachers' contract permits union workers - including
president Jerry Jordan - to accrue seniority and pension time as well as
receive district health insurance.
Jordan said he was pleased that the court dismissed the
"frivolous antiunion suit."
The Fairness Center intends to appeal the ruling, said
David Osborne, general counsel for the public-interest law firm.
"It's common sense that our government should not be
staffing union offices," Osborne said.
Source: Philly.com
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