Monday, May 23, 2011

Democrats Join the Raid On Union Bargaining Rights

Unbelievable. 

Howard Ryan
May 23, 2011
Rarely have labor-backed Democrats targeted the very right of public employees to collectively bargain. That’s now changing. In several states, Democratic legislators are betting they can cut into public employee bargaining rights and still win union backing.
 
Politicians of both parties have been tough on public employees in this recession, balancing state and city budgets through layoffs, wage freezes, furloughs, and benefit cuts. But rarely have labor-backed Democrats targeted the very right of public employees to collectively bargain.
That’s now changing. In Massachusetts, New Jersey, Illinois, and Connecticut, Democratic legislators, eager to save money, are betting they can cut into public employee bargaining rights and still win union backing at election time.
It’s a tightrope for the pols. Democrats get most of their campaign funding—72 percent nationally—from business, AFL-CIO President Rich Trumka said this month. He added that the union share of the Democrats’ war chest has fallen to half what it was a decade ago.
But union money is still substantial. AFSCME claimed top place in all political spending in 2010, pouring $87.5 million into campaigns.
And union get-out-the-vote efforts can make or break some races. Union-household voters increased both Obama’s percentage and that for House Democrats by 2.4 points in 2008.
Legislators need to keep unions in the fold. How much can they go against core union desires and still win their backing?
Precedent says—a lot. Year after year, union leaders look at the greater-evil Republican alternative and urge members to work for the Democrat, no matter how sorry the candidate.
In New Jersey, the Communications Workers, representing 45,000 state and local government employees, dogged Democratic Governor Jon Corzine’s heels for months in 2009, protesting his plan to cut their wages through furloughs. But CWA endorsed Corzine when he was up against layoff-happy Republican Chris Christie.
Democratic legislators, eager to save money, are betting they can cut into public employee bargaining rights. These New Jersey public workers are not happy about it. Photo: CWA Local 1037.
As Republicans like Christie and Wisconsin’s Scott Walker tilt further to the Tea Party right, the desire to keep them out of office at all costs becomes even stronger. After all, Walker’s ilk wants to do away with public sector unions—and their donations to Democrats—altogether. Democratic politicians are banking on that dime’s worth of difference.

OUTRAGE OVER ‘BETRAYAL’

In Massachusetts, a Democratic stronghold, lawmakers are pressing to strip 175,000 municipal employees of health care bargaining rights. House members passed a measure April 26 that would prevent teachers, police officers, and others from bargaining over deductibles and co-pays.
Two-thirds of House Democrats supported the measure, ignoring protests and a radio ad campaign coordinated by the state AFL-CIO. The Democrats’ action has led to “tremendous outrage and feeling of betrayal” in the labor movement, observes Dan Clawson, a board member of the Massachusetts Teachers Association (MTA). “It’s definitely a break from the past.”
The Democrats’ bill, which purports to save $100 million in health insurance costs, comes in the context of a nearly $2 billion state deficit. The deficit impacts local governments, which rely on state revenue sharing.
Budget-strapped municipalities are eager to shift health care costs to employees, as state government did last year. Municipal employers are supporting the anti-bargaining bill so that they can impose such changes unilaterally.
Most legislators dismiss other options to address the state’s deficit, such as raising taxes or reforming health care to control costs. Labor and community groups, on the other hand, propose to raise $1.2 billion through increased capital gains taxes and income taxes for high earners. Hundreds of labor and community activists converged on the Statehouse May 3 for a day of hearings and lobbying.
But the battle is uphill. Only a handful of legislators back the tax increase, and they’re the brave ones, says Andrei Joseph, a Concord history teacher and MTA board member.
In next-door Connecticut, the governor and top Democrats in the legislature sponsored language to take bargaining rights away from college faculty by reclassifying them as managers.

FRIENDS LIKE THESE

Health care bargaining is the battleground in New Jersey as well. The Communications Workers opened contract negotiations in March with a health care proposal that conceded higher costs for members.
But Christie refused to bargain, and instead proposed employees pay 35 percent of premiums, up from the current 8.5 percent average.
Christie’s proposal was followed by a slightly better one from Democratic Senate President Stephen Sweeney, who is also an organizer for the Iron Workers.
Both proposals strip unions of the right to bargain health care, however.
“We’re shocked that Steve Sweeney, who calls himself a Democrat, would act in this manner,” said a state Firefighters official.
Patrick Kavanaugh, president of CWA Local 1032, says a worker making $35,000 would pay $3,000 under Sweeney’s proposal and $5,700 under the governor’s, compared to $525 now.
In response, CWA and other public employee unions are asking legislators to pledge to oppose the removal of union bargaining rights. Some have signed on, reports Kavanaugh, while six legislators who refused have already been targeted with picket lines in front of their offices. Members are demanding that health care be bargained, not legislated, he said.

HIT THE TEACHER

Illinois’s bargaining rights war has focused on teachers, Chicago teachers in particular. Democratic legislators have joined hands with billionaire-backed lobby groups in an effort to deprive teachers of bargaining rights, job security, and the ability to strike.
A first attempt in January, led by Democratic House Speaker Mike Madigan, fizzled in the face of opposition from the Chicago Teachers Union (CTU) and both statewide teacher unions. The corporate lobbies followed up with a clever spring offensive, however. They engaged the teacher unions in negotiations at the state Capitol, with Democratic State Senator Karen Lightford shepherding the process.
The teacher unions were prepared to make concessions—for example, to accept takeaways on seniority rights—in order to avoid greater losses (including the loss of collective bargaining).
But Lightford and the lobbyists inserted last-minute changes in the bill that union negotiators failed to catch. Chicago teachers would be prevented from filing unfair labor practice charges if an employer refused to bargain over many subjects. The bill also sets up roadblocks that make it virtually impossible for Chicago teachers to strike.
CTU’s president joined the two statewide teacher federations in endorsing the bill, which sailed through the Democratic-controlled Senate.
Two weeks later CTU reversed its stance, but the bill passed the Democratic-controlled House with only one dissenter. The teachers are now fighting for a “trailer” bill to amend the measure’s worst aspects.

CONSEQUENCES

The willingness of state Democrats to turn on labor, coupled with the Obama administration’s lackluster support for union issues, is causing Trumka to make tentative noises about political independence.
Trumka said the federation will spend much more of its political-action money this year and next on educating and mobilizing members “year-round,” instead of handing it over to Democrats and their campaign structures in election season. The activity would still aid Democratic candidates, presumably.
Trumka went further, vowing to “actually make people pay a price” if they don’t keep promises, hinting that unions could challenge unsupportive Democrats in primaries, as they did (unsuccessfully) against ex-Senator Blanche Lincoln in Arkansas last year.
Trumka added that unions will “start running some of our own, in state races.”
Even that degree of independence would require a major shift in union thinking. In Wisconsin, anger at the Republican onslaught enabled unions and supporters to gather signatures to force recall elections of six Republican state senators this summer.
Despite the upsurge of support for unions, only one of the Democrats recruited to run, a teacher, comes out of the labor movement.


Jane Slaughter contributed to this article.

Sunday, May 1, 2011

Men in historic strike enter hall of fame

It's nice to see the rank and file members of this historic public employee strike get some overdue recognition.

WASHINGTON (AP) — Labor Secretary Hilda Solis on Friday honored the 1,300 black workers who took part in the Memphis sanitation strike of 1968, taking a swipe at governors who are trying to curtail public union employees’ benefits.
The strike, where the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. made his final campaign before an assassin’s bullet took his life, played a major role in the civil rights movement and the fight for social and economic justice for black workers. It also is considered a watershed moment in the history of collective bargaining rights for public employees, a point Solis raised as she criticized the move in some states to curb bargaining rights for public workers.
“Today, some governors are using the financial crisis as an excuse to take this country backward, instead of forward,” Solis said in a ceremony at the agency’s headquarters. “But we know American workers still want and need a voice at the table. We know collective bargaining gives them that seat.”
Solis formally inducted all 1,300 of the striking workers into the agency’s Labor Hall of Fame, founded in 1988 to honor the memory of people who have enhanced the quality of life for American workers. The hall of fame typically includes famous union heroes like Cesar Chavez and Mother Jones, but Solis said it was time to recognize a group of rank-and-file workers who helped shape history.
The public sanitation workers in Memphis went on strike after two of their co-workers were accidentally crushed to death on the job. They were seeking higher wages, better working conditions and the right to form a union. After 63 days of striking and peaceful demonstrations, they won many of their demands, including overtime pay, sick leave and improved safety conditions.
Eight of the men who took part in the strike, members of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, attended the Labor Department ceremony. The men also met earlier with President Barack Obama at the White House.
The White House says Obama is committed to the cause for which the workers marched “as workers across the country continue to face challenges to their rights.” Both Solis and Obama have made a number of public statements to support union members protesting GOP efforts to curtail union rights