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2002 Table of Contents |
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Your ideas on cutting waste. You can help close the budget gap and improve the bargaining climate. Send your ideas on increasing revenues and eliminating waste in your agency - including contracting out and the use of uniformed personnel for civilian work. Send to: Editor, Public Employee Press, DC 37, 125 Barclay St., New York, NY 10007. Or email PEPeditor@DC37.net |
With major municipal union contracts expiring as the
city faces a $4.8 billion budget gap, labor leaders and activists
got together March 4 and 5 to discuss strategy.
Representatives from many DC 37 locals and other public sector unions
in the city attended the Municipal Labor Committee conference in Rye
Brook, N.Y. to analyze the mayor's proposed budget-balancing plan
and consider the collective bargaining climate for 2002.
The two-day session had originally been scheduled for September 2001.
MLC Chair and United Federation of Teachers President Randi Weingarten
opened the conference by putting the coming negotiations in the context
of the Sept. 11 tragedy.
"It was public sector workers who answered the city's call that
tragic day, and we have done everything possible since then for the
recovery," she said.
Ms. Weingarten introduced Lillian Roberts, DC 37's new top leader,
to the gathering and said, "Municipal workers and government
are seen differently now. As a workforce we feel stronger and more
unified. Our members will look very carefully at whether others are
sacrificing before they agree to any givebacks."
In panel discussions, Labor Relations Commissioner James Hanley and
Budget Director Mark Page valiantly presented management's side. They
were answered by an array of unionists and economists. MLC Executive
Secretary Theresa Sirabella of the DC 37 Research and Negotiations
Dept. coordinated the annual conference.
Economist James Parrott of the Fiscal Policy Institute said that most
of the economic gains from 1989-'99 had gone to the wealthiest 20
percent of the population, but that low and moderate income families
had suffered the brunt of the recent job losses. He blamed "overzealous
tax cuts" for the current budget gap and called on the city and
state to "think of reversing these economic missteps."
Among his gap-closing proposals was bringing the city an additional
$500 million of revenue by restoring the commuter tax that the state
Legislature canceled in 1999.
"When the mayor says, 'I want your cooperation,' he means 'I
want your wages and benefits,' " cautioned economist Alan Brawer,
who pointed out that suburbanites who work in New York City would
have little trouble paying the 85-cent-a-day commuter tax. Lawrence
Lukens of Local 299 agreed, saying, "It's time to make corporations
and commuters pay their fair share of the tax burden."
President Patrick Bahnken described Local 2507's efforts to save city
funds by battling privatization of ambulance services, and Larry Hendel
of Local 375 said he believes that ending contracting out could save
enough to close the budget gap.
Many participants agreed that the mayor should ask Gov. Pataki and
the Legislature to restore the commuter tax. "People from the
suburbs who work in New York City benefit from our services. They
should pay a fair share of the costs," said Local 1930 President
Ray Markey.