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Newsroom
2009 News Releases
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| FOR IMMEDIATE
RELEASE March 31, 2009 | |
Contact: Jillian Matundan (518)
869-2245 Zita Allen (212) 815-1535 Korey Hartwich (301) 742-4646
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Public
Employees for Fair Budget and Taxes
Albany
Today more than 2,000 public and non-profit workers, members of AFSCME New York
affiliates from across the state, stormed the state capitol to call for a fair
state budget that puts New York's economy back on track and protects vital public
services. After hearing from key state leaders including State Comptroller Tom
DiNapoli, Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver, and Senate Majority Leader Malcolm
Smith, the AFSCME members met with legislators to make the case for the fair way
to put New Yorkers back to work and to pay for the essential services that New
York State delivers.
"Today the working people of New York are here
to remind the governor and the legislature of what their priorities should be:
getting this state and its people through these tough times by restarting the
economy and by protecting the essential services that keep counties, cities, towns
and this entire state functioning," said AFSCME International President Gerald
W. McEntee. "If New York is to emerge stronger, then the state's elected
leaders must act boldly and wisely to build a foundation for lasting prosperity.
Not just for the wealthiest citizens, but for the working people who make this
great state happen."
The nation's economic crisis has hit New York
particularly hard with a budget gap estimated at $16 billion, endangering vital
services that the public relies on. Governor David Paterson is proposing measures
that will cause more problems for the people and the economy. Instead of sharing
the sacrifice amongst the citizens of the state or finding better revenue solutions,
he has proposed huge cuts to essential programs, increased fees and regressive
consumption taxes, and Tuesday ordered the layoff of thousands of state employees.
His proposals would make the economy worse, and hurt New York State, the citizens
who live here and the workers who deliver essential public services.
"New
Yorkers deserve better than a plan that will put nearly 9,000 taxpayers out of
work and erode public services when they are needed most and at best will cause
chaos in state operations," said Danny Donohue, president of CSEA, Local
1000, AFSCME's largest affiliate. "CSEA members and their brothers and sisters
will use the opportunity to let New York's elected officials know exactly how
reckless and irresponsible Governor David Paterson's plan to eliminate the jobs
of 8,900 state employees really is."
Dangerous cuts to healthcare,
education and essential public services are not the way to go. Economists know
that in times of recession, the worst thing that government can do is cut spending
on critical state services. AFSCME believes - and economists agree - that rather
than make harmful and dangerous cuts, New York's wealthier citizens should do
their fair share to help us get through these tough times.
"Nobody
knows better than the members of DC 37, AFSCME, the severity of this fiscal crisis.
We're on the frontlines every day as millions of New Yorkers struggle to stay
afloat. We know the pain and suffering these proposed cuts could cause. We also
know that the answer is not Governor Paterson's plan of putting 9,000 public employees'
jobs on the chopping block or Mayor Bloomberg's plan of putting 23,000 workers
on the unemployment lines, said DC 37 Executive Director Lillian Roberts. "That's
not the solution to this problem. The solution is jobs, jobs, and more jobs. That's
why President Barack Obama's stimulus package is designed to generate jobs not
destroy them. If there is one thing that should be obvious in this economic climate
it is that layoffs are not the solution, they only compound the problem we're
facing."
"Also, our research shows that the City could save over
$9 billion if it stopped paying private contractors to do the same job our members
do better and for a lot less."
AFSCME New York
represents 420,000 public services workers across the state, made up of members
from CSEA Local 1000, District Council 37, DC 1707, Council 35, Council 66, and
Council 82.
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