Sunday, May 19, 2013
Sunday, May 19, 2013

Ritchie Webb: Neshaminy's savior or ogre?

The school board president and lead negotiator in Neshaminy' bitter 3 1/2-year contract impasse with teachers has developed a cult following for holding firm on how much the district can afford. Teachers consider him immovable, unreasonable, and a union buster.

43 comments

Ritchie Webb: Neshaminy's savior or ogre?

POSTED: Saturday, February 4, 2012, 10:31 AM
Blog Image
Neshaminy School Board President Ritchie Webb in his office in his Levittown home. He runs a catering business, a food service for the Bristol Township School District, and a tax and accounting business. (Ron Tarver/Inquirer photographer)

There's no middle ground when it comes to Ritchie Webb.

Take, for example, last month’s Neshaminy school board meeting. As Webb took his seat as president, half the packed crowd rose and cheered; the remainder jeered and chanted, “Negotiate.”

Webb has stood center stage in the district’s bitter and polarizing contract impasse for four years — the longest-running stalemate in the state, with no end in sight.

To his supporters, he is “a hero,” “cunning,” and “fair.”

His critics call him a union-buster who refuses to negotiate in good faith with the 654-member Neshaminy Federation of Teachers.

“My main thought has always been to err on the side of the children,” Webb said last week. “People lose sight of the big picture. If we cannot negotiate a contract we can afford, by law we have to cut programs and close schools.

“The schools were built for our children, not for anyone else. I don’t want my grandchildren not to have gym class, not to play music. Those are things that would have to go.”

Webb, 58, of Levittown, is in his ninth year on the board. Last year, the registered Republican ran unopposed for a third term, campaigning for the contract offer now on the table: a 1 percent raise in base salaries each of the next three years, a 15 percent contribution by teachers for health insurance, no retroactive pay, and elimination of the early-retirement incentive.

“I wanted to see it through,” Webb said. “I started with it, and I thought I know it better than most people.”

Webb “deals with the union the way he deals with everyone: He’s extraordinarily fair,” former board member William O’Connor said.

Union negotiator Jeff Dunkley said Webb “comes across as a gentleman” in the contract talks. “He smiles a lot, shakes your hand, and acts polite. What’s most frustrating is his inability or unwillingness to bring this drawn-out impasse to a logical conclusion.”

That frustration led to last month’s eight-day strike by teachers, counselors, nurses and librarians, forcing the cancellation of classes for the 8,568 students. Webb promptly suspended contract talks until the teachers returned to work.

O’Connor calls Webb “dumb as a fox.”

“He likes to play the coy, backward guy from the South — very grandfatherly,” O’Connor said. “You wouldn’t think he has much on the ball. He’s so much smarter, more cunning than you’d ever give him credit for.”

Webb was born in 1953 in Lester, W.Va., the son of a coal miner. When the mines closed, the family moved to Bristol Borough for his father to work construction.

After graduating from Bristol High School, Webb took accounting courses, college courses, and training in food safety. He and Jennie, his wife of 41 years, have run Webb Caterers in Bristol Borough since 1979.

The couple also offer courses on safe food preparation for restaurants. And Webb also provides the food service for Bristol Township School District’s 7,000 students, and runs a tax and accounting business.

“With my background, and working in another district, I know the rules, regulations, and politics of a large school district,” he said.

In 2003, Webb thought his background would be an asset to Neshaminy, which was facing another tough choice: renovate the high school or build a new one. He won his first election and a seat on the board.

When O’Connor and another Democrat were elected to the Republican-controlled board in 2007, the first thing Webb did “was reach out to each of us,” O’Connor said.

“It showed me how much he wanted to be a true bipartisan leader, to trust each other,” O’Connor said. “That’s when he turned the corner with me.”

Larry Pastor, founder of the Neshaminy Taxpayers organization, calls Webb “a hero.”

"He's not politically driven; he's not power-driven," said Pastor, who met Webb when the contract issue surfaced. "He hates people doing the wrong thing — he defends our students from the loss of programs and educational quality by holding out for an affordable contract.

“He truly believes in the rights of students and the rights of taxpayers. He truly respects educators, Pastor added. “It’s not about bashing teachers; it’s about economics.”

But Dunkley questions Webb’s respect for teachers. During the strike, Webb called teachers “poor examples for our children,” and at public board meetings he allows residents to criticize teachers, often harshly, without defending them.

“As an educator, as someone who loves his job, I find it hard not to be offended by that,” Dunkley said, who teaches social studies at the high school. “It’s hard to reconcile his words with his actions, or inactions.”

Webb maintains that the district cannot afford the union’s latest demand for raises: 2.75 percent, 3 percent and 3.5 percent for three years, plus a 1 percent retroactive raise for last year. Base salaries under the expired contract range from $42,552 to $95,923; the average salary is about $79,000.

By holding firm, he has developed a cult following among taxpayers; union members and backers call him unreasonable and immovable.

He also has been accused of trying to break the union, whose members are working their fourth school year without a raise. 

“I’m very pro-union, not antiunion,” Webb said at a recent board meeting. “My father was a coal miner. One son is a police officer; another is a union carpenter in Philadelphia. I’m treasurer of a bargaining unit” of the PSEA Pennsylvania State Education Association.

Webb’s son the police officer, Ritchie Webb Jr., is embroiled in a fight of his own. The Bristol Borough patrolman has filed a civil suit in U.S. District Court against borough officials and members of the police department, alleging harassment and retaliation for refusing to lie for a former officer. That officer pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor charge and served three months in jail for using his position to have sex with a woman.

Webb has two other sons and two daughters, all grown, and seven grandchildren, ages 18 to 3 months, including four in elementary and middle schools.

“In 2003, I never envisioned it would be this tough a job,” Webb said of school board duties. “I never added up the time — probably 20 hours a week with calls.”

As the district’s lead negotiator, Webb has received personal attacks, threats, and nasty letters from people “who want me to give in to the union’s demands,” he said. “But the public support has been phenomenal. Ninety to 95 percent of the e-mails are in total support.”

Board work makes it tough for him to follow the Phillies regularly, but he manages to catch Eagles games. And work on the contract, including 37 negotiating sessions, has cut into his time at the family’s Shore house and fishing for flounder on his 18-foot Parker center-console boat.
Webb said his goal is to settle the contract.

“I have no political ambitions. I want to finish my term and spend time with my family,” he said. “I’ll continue my careers and work toward retirement. I’m too old to work and too young to retire.”

Bill Reed @ 10:31 AM  Permalink | 43 comments
43 comments
Comments  (43)
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 11:16 AM, 02/04/2012
    DOOOOSH.
    legend1
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 11:26 AM, 02/04/2012
    If he wants to settle the contract, why has it drug on for four years?
    mike l
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 11:33 AM, 02/04/2012
    Larry Pastor is my hero
    stevejones
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 11:50 AM, 02/04/2012
    We need to break the teachers union....they always come first and the children second.
    hulk0455
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 11:51 AM, 02/04/2012
    I like how he brags about taking "college courses." You get em, big guy.
    legend1
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 11:57 AM, 02/04/2012
    Teachers unions, as well as ALL government employee unions need to be broken. They are far, far out of wack with the private sector, who it just so happens pay their freight. Long overdue and in need of immediate action.
    fgomarty
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 11:58 AM, 02/04/2012
    Wouldnt it be a conflict of interest that the school board head has a contract for all of the school lunches????
    rs1982
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 12:09 PM, 02/04/2012

    We need to make sure that teachers take serious pay cuts and have little say in how their schools are run. That way, Pennsylvania can finally achieve the educational levels of states such as Mississippi, Alabama and South Carolina.
    DiTurno
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 12:21 PM, 02/04/2012
    Webb sounds like a great guy. A person who the courage of his convictions. Willing to "err on the side of the children." However, that doesn't mean that he's right on this issue. If he err's, he hurts the children. A man of principle who can't compromise, who can't pull the trigger to get things done, is not doing his job.
    Boru
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 1:17 PM, 02/04/2012
    To hell with the Teachers!!! GO WEBB!...
    fbpdplt
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 1:36 PM, 02/04/2012
    West Virginia is in the South now? Really?
    HazmatCorntail
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 1:49 PM, 02/04/2012
    Mr. Webb has earned an approval rating of about 95% in our community. It's phenomenal how united Neshaminy is even after the strike. This is unprecedented. It's been a perfect storm, a wonderful, honest, open school board fronted by gentleman Webb, and out-of-control tone-deaf Union fronted by the worst leadership known to man, and the relentless passion of Larry Pastor keeping the community educated. The Inquirer should do a sit down with Larry, allowing him to connect all the dots in this fascinating story. Larry has single-handedly exposed the absurdity that is the NFT. The children and the teachers themselves have been victimized beyond belief.
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 2:11 PM, 02/04/2012
    The time has come for Pennsylvania to become a right-to-work state.
    johduk
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 2:14 PM, 02/04/2012
    You don't need to break the unions. You need to get a new union leader who has a clue. You have the highest payed teachers in the state and they apparently don't know how to read the business/economics section of newspapers or follow the national/world news about the dire straits the economy is in. As a teamster of more then 25 years I know the plus/minus of unions. If your leaders negotiate with pride and ego on the line, you'll lose. When you negotiate a contract, you're negotiating the working conditions of future teachers and those future teachers are your students. This union leader can;t see that and is failing her own rank and file by leading a poorly run battle plan. She's alienating the parents and the students as well as dividing her members. Every union and non-union employee pays for some of there healthcare package today. This union doesn't seem to understand that. There's not a worker out there that likes it, but they do it to continue working for a fair days pay. This union is tapped out because it's run by a fool. The taxpayers can't afford her demands and she's to thick skulled to see it. She should be removed from her post by someone who understands the situation and the climate so they can end this very long and stupid strike.
    WBFO
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 2:16 PM, 02/04/2012
    rs1982- As noted in the article, Webb Caterers has the contract providing lunches for Bristol Township School District. Webb is Board President for the Neshaminy School District. Apples & Oranges.
    calfonso97


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About this blog
Chris Palmer covers Bucks County for the Philadelphia Inquirer. His previous work has appeared in the New York Times and on several Times blogs, including City Room, the Local East Village and SchoolBook (which has since been taken over by WNYC). Contact him at cpalmer@phillynews.com, 610 313 8212 or on Twitter, @cs_palmer.

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