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#1
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Teachers----I do not think teachers are under paid at all. People choose to be a teacher. You actually have to go to college and get a Masters. You know the pay going in so it is your choice to make that pay. They work about the same amount of hours as a person who is not a teacher that works a 40 hour a week job in a years time. The benefits, the retirement and the age of retirement are all very attractive. I believe in Indiana you can retire by using a formula--something like years of experience plus age and if that number is 52 or 58 you can retire. What many teachers do in Southern Indiana is to retire from Kentucky and then move over to Indiana to teach and then they pull down 2 retirements. Now find me a job where you can retire at the age of 55 and receive full pension and benefits. |
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#2
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Euro,
if you think teachers will be able to hold on to health benefits and pension by the time I'm 55 I have a bridge to sell you. It won't be there....I have no problem with you saying that teachers know the pay going in. Very fair and I really don't complain about. I'm much more angry when they say teachers are overpaid. Last I looked I got about a 3% raise last year. The cost of living in New Jersey went up by 3.5%. Do the math, I am losing each year, not gaining....I can't think of another job where people say you "should get paid this or that." I don't go to a doctor's office or a mechanic and tell them what I think they are worth. I think the issue is that everyone went to school and everyone thinks they could do the job....You should realize, however, if you have kids or want kids that schools are about as important as it gets. And if you do, you'd also realize that without changes to the pay scale, the teacher pool and moreover the quality of the teachers will continue to diminish. If that's what you want for your kids then that's fine. It's not what I want. Last edited by randallscott35 : 10-26-2006 at 06:49 PM. |
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#3
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#4
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There seems to be a major disconnect going on here. NY Racing, aside from the obvious jobs it provides in NY State, also contributes enormous revenue to the State. This is undeniable and should be obvious. The money needed for the " bailout " is a LOAN, something that is done by the State in many situations, and will be paid back.
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#6
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#7
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#8
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I don't have a dog in this specific fight, but I race horses in NY so I do have a vested interest.
I think many people tend to look at the present situation -- and then often collapse the present situation with blame. I am not inferring that the present is an inherited situation. I am also not saying NYRA is an "angel" and has never done anything wrong; nor am I saying that everything is their fault. However, everything we see today is not due to NYRA, corruption, management, etc. What we see today, in my opinion, is an accumulation of numerous aspects -- not only of NYRA, management, etc. -- but of the industry in general. The business model in NY, NY racing as a business and as a sport, has been broken for years. I didn't see any bidders hanging around and pushing for the franchise until the VLT legislation got passed. They didn't start pushing until the VLT deal was made. (I think we can all agree that is the VLT's were not approved -- nobody would be pushing, bidding, etc. on the franchise unless the land was up for grabs as well; or perhaps OTB). Now, in my opinion, this is reflective of a bigger issue -- alternative revenue source(s) being available to fund the racing business. Keeneland gets a tremendous amount of money, revenue, directly from the sales company. Alternative revenue sources are very often an ancillary, then becoming a primary solution to a present problem -- a problem where a business model is broken. Now that doesn't mean that VLT's are the solution to the racing industry because we know it is not. VLT money will find its way into purse accounts, but we know the trickle-down, trickle-over, etc. effect will not happen. VLT players do not become fans nor do they become visitors to the windows -- not to any significant degree. What will still hurt is that the tax rate (for the VLT dollars) in NY is extremely high. You want to argue about non-profit vs. for-profit? Here is what most people do not understand -- non-profit is a tax status, not a management style. What about Woodbine? What does their business model look like? A partnership between the government and the track, and it has proven successful. It has had a very positive impact on purses. What has it done for pure racetrack attendance, handle, etc.? This is very dangerous -- so at Finger Lakes management decides to invest $4m or so into the VLT side of the facility and goes against getting a turf course. Management said it was a "business" decision, a ROR/ROI decision, etc. But Woodbine has put money into the racetrack side of the facility. This business and this sport -- not only in NY, but all over -- needs to reinvent itself. Not drastic change that completely changes the business and sport, but change the mindset and management style of running a track as a business and running a business in and around this sport. Eric |
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#9
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Geez, Eric, I never realized you were such a smart guy.
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#10
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Anyway -- no offense everyone, but this has nothing to do with the prices of hotdogs and beer, or admission and parking for that matter. Do not confuse cause and effect. Those elements would correct themselves if the larger, marcro-issues were addressed. I don't want to start another arguement here but the sport and the business around this sport has changed. It is not what it used to be 40 or 50 years ago. Some, all, or part of this has evolved into an entertainment environment. You know what's changed since then? Everything. There are parts of this that are evolutionary and there are other parts that are revolutionary. Now I know the old fashion, diehard, hard-core, etc. gambler types will absolutely despise this and what's going on in our industry -- but today's racing facility, the product, and numeorus other aspects of sport/business are without question competing with other mediums and environments for our dollars. You don't have to like it or deal with it but it is a fact. OTB, off-shore, internet wagering, the back room at the bar, etc. -- all of them are competition. The casinos, race books, and other forms of entertainment and gambling, whether pari-mutuel or not. The products may be different, but we are talking about gambling dollars, entertainment, costs, etc. Many people do not like what Frank Stronach is doing down at Gulfstream. I've been there numerous times so I am not speaking absent of facts. Stronach is a visionary. You may hate the vision, but he has one. You may think he is inept at running a publicly traded company. You may think he is guilty of many things. But he is committed to the vision. Sports bars, fine dining, cigar lounges, VLT's, shows, and other forms of entertainment. Retail, commercial, other real estate strucutures. This will bring people to a facility. The track will be there. Will they turn into fans? Will they turn into gamblers? Will they turn into regulars? Possible -- not probable; not to a significant extent or degree. That is not the only answer though. But this, and the alternative forms of revenue will find its way into purses. It will trickle into other areas. There will be ancillary effects -- yes, both positive and negative -- in other aspects. This should contribute and make progress toward more competitive fields and more competitive racing throughout a meet. This could attract people to the business (ownership; although that's another aspect of the business that needs to be cleaned up). This should lead to increased handle -- not just on-track handle however. Sure, there are several "shoulds" and "coulds" there -- but that is what's needed. A new paradigm. A paradigm shift in the way this sport and this business is looked at, operated, and run. I don't mean to oversimplify the problems or the solutions. This ain't your mom and pop grocery store anymore. You can't run it like it is. Eric |
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#11
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Eric I agree with you. Tracks cannot survive by just offering racing anymore. There needs to be other sources of revenue. Hopefully that revenue finds it was into purses. Who cares if a non-racing fan goes to the "racino" and takes in a show, or eats dinner or watches a movie. The point is that revenue is being generated to increase purses and that helps fields, horseman and basically the industry. If 1 of a thousand people turn into a horse player then it was a success. If not, horsemen will gladly accept the money the patrons spent on dinner or other forms of entertainment.
The business needs to evolve and not digress. It needs to transform likes other forms of entertainment has. I think it has a long long way to go but with people like Frank we can get there. Not saying his way is right, but at least he is trying. |
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#12
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#13
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Eric |
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#15
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Most people have never even heard of the Travers. The Mid Summer Derby name is a complete joke. |
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#17
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Face it, nobody cares about the Travers except horse racing fans. The KY Derby is a huge event, the rating are huge every year. The Travers would get cut for little league baseball, because little league baseball gets higher ratings. |
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