I live in the suburbs North & West of Philadelphia, NOT New York by any stretch of the imagination.
A neighboring district went on strike 2 or 3 years ago by rejecting a contract that would have put the average starting salary of new teachers at $52,260. This same contract would have set the top step (15+ years of teaching) at an average salary of $86,028 by the final year of the contract.
Keep in mind this is a district whose tax base is paid primarily by retirees. Still scratching my head as to why this contract was voted down, especially in the face of the economy? Then I remember, as I posted in another thread, this district was being called a "benchmark" district for the NEA and PSEA. In other words, they had to try and win as big of a contract as necessary so that other Districts in the State would be able to use them as an example. I felt bad for the teachers, because they were facing the vitriol of the public on the front lines, while they were really nothing but pawns in a larger game.
I really think this is what it is becoming in Wisconsin. The teachers are now being used as pawns.