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Public Employee Press
"It's time for City Hall to stop blaming workers," said Ahern. "We deserve fair pay and benefits, not the unemployment line!" The message of the demonstrators resonated at the City Council, which two weeks later approved a budget that included millions of dollars in restorations and fewer layoffs than projected in the mayor's original financial plan. In May, Bloomberg laid off 63 of the city's 84 pest control specialists in Local 768 and in June 100 social service workers in Local 371, each with 15 years or more on the job, got pink slips from the Administration for Children's Services. The mayor's plan called for cutting more Sanitation and Health Dept. workers, slashing library funds (threatening 620 layoffs at Queens and Brooklyn libraries), closing public swimming pools two weeks early (chopping workers' pay 20 percent) and shuttering 20 firehouses (despite a Columbia University study showing that the city needs more firehouses). His proposed budget would have shrunk the count of first responders to pre-9/11 levels, and wiped out Health and Hospitals Corp. jobs by closing neighborhood clinics and replacing its central laundry with outside contracts. "The mayor chooses to give $9.5 billion to 18,000 private contractors when city workers can do a better job, faster and cheaper," said DC 37 Treasurer Maf Misbah Uddin. "The mayor is making the wrong choices. There are no savings in these cuts." "We are not going to stand by and lose our jobs as work is handed over to private contractors," Roberts said. Rally speakers urged the mayor to consider other cost-saving measures and reminded him of labor's role in saving the city from bankruptcy in the 1970s, when the federal government told New York to drop dead and public employee pension funds financed a rescue.
"Our solution is to end the rampant contracting out of the work of civil service employees to private contractors and consultants at an exorbitant cost," Roberts said. "As an immediate solution, we call on the City Council to exercise its power to cut funding for consultant contracts by at least 15 percent. The $316 million savings would be sufficient to avert all layoffs and service reductions." "The mayor and City Council have the opportunity to do the right thing by workers," said Faye Moore, president of SSEU Local 371. "Creating and sustaining jobs should be politicians' number one priority," she said. Instead of the rosy future Bloomberg painted as he campaigned for a third term last November, his 2011 budget would create a New York nightmare resembling the dismal late 1970s and 1980s. Do the right thing The mayor and the media scapegoat municipal employees for the role their modest pay, benefits and pensions play in the city's budget problems, but they ignore the greedy Wall Street titans who bankrupted Main Street through subprime mortgage scams and crooked investments, took a $700 billion bailout from taxpayers and rewarded themselves with multi-million-dollar bonuses. "Labor makes this city happen. Without us this city doesn't move," said Local 372 and DC 37 President Veronica Montgomery-Costa. "Labor is alive and well and we will fight to the bitter end to get what we deserve."
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