ON THE
WSWS
Donate
to
the WSWS!
News Feed
Contact
the
WSWS
Editorial
Board
New
Today
News
& Analysis
Workers
Struggles
Arts
Review
History
Science
Polemics
Philosophy
Correspondence
Archive
About
WSWS
About
the ICFI
Help
Books
Online
OTHER
LANGUAGES
German
French
Italian
Russian
Polish
Czech
Serbo-Croatian
Spanish
Portuguese
Turkish
Sinhala-
Tamil
Indonesian
LEAFLETS
Download
in
PDF format
|
|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America
New report details corruption of New York's municipal workers
union
By Alan Whyte
30 May 2001
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email
A new report resulting from an audit of New York City's largest
municipal union reveals even greater corruption than had been
previously reported. The KPMG Peat Marwick firm was hired to audit
the activities of District Council (DC) 37 and its 56 member locals
from 1995 to 1998.
Lee Saunders, who was appointed by the national union to head
the city chapter, ordered the audit. DC 37 has been under receivership
of its parent union, the American Federation of State, County
and Municipal Employees (AFSCME), since November of 1998 when
the corruption scandal involving large sections of the council
leadership surfaced. This involved revelations of kickback schemes,
embezzlement and theft of union money to maintain the lavish lifestyles
of union leaders.
Union officials also rigged the 1996 contract vote to show
the membership voted for a five-year concessions package. If the
vote had been conducted honestly, it would have shown the majority
of workers rejected the deal. The contract included a wage freeze
during the first two years of the agreement, and introduced two-tier
wage arrangements that imposed substandard conditions on newly
hired workers.
DC 37 represents 125,000 municipal workers who have a wide
variety of occupations, such as clerical work, filling potholes,
social work, cafeteria work, as well as maintaining the zoos.
Some of these workers are very poorly paid. For example, a cafeteria
aide can make as little as $11,000 a year. The fraudulent passage
of the contract helped solidify the union bureaucracy's relationship
with Republican Mayor Rudolph Giuliani, whom they later endorsed
for reelection. The union leaders therefore headed off labor unrest
while the city administration proceeded with cuts in welfare and
social programs.
Twenty-nine union officials have been charged by the Manhattan
District Attorney's office for stealing from union funds and rigging
the contract vote. Twenty-two have pleaded guilty, three have
been convicted, three have cases that are pending and one was
indicted before he died. The district attorney has also indicted
three vendors for involvement in a scheme to overcharge the union,
enabling union officials to rake in much of the money produced
by the inflated prices. The two biggest thieves now serving jail
sentences are Charles Hughes, president of Local 372, and Al Diop,
president of Local 1549. Each of these men stole more than $2
million from the union.
The audit spells out the specific ways in which the union chiefs
went about stealing from their members' union dues. It describes
how the bureaucrats went on expensive trips, received gifts, used
union credit cards for personal expenses, ran up huge tabs at
restaurants that were billed to the union, and were involved in
various kickback schemes.
The report describes, for example, how the union leadership
managed to spend about $345,000 at a 1996 union convention held
in Chicago. The tab included $29,250 for 9,000 jumbo gulf shrimp
and $11,250 for Cajun chicken wings. In addition, the conventioneers
consumed 2,500 smoked salmon canapés, nine roast steamships
of beef and nine honey-glazed hams. In order to help wash the
food down, the bureaucrats used $74,590 from the union treasury
for drinks, including what were referred to as top-shelf
liquors.
The auditors examined how the union gave $1.5 million in catering
business to the Gee Whiz restaurant for over four years. The restaurant's
owner has already pleaded guilty to inflating invoices and paying
kickbacks to union officials. The audit examined other questionable
spending that indicates that there were many kickback schemes.
For example, Dr. Chaim Reich billed DC 37 at the rate of $200
per hour from 1995 to 1998. He received $284,963 without having
any records of what hours he worked for the union. The doctor
was part of 17-man delegation that spent 10 days in Israel at
a conference on communicable diseases, costing the council more
than $90,000.
From 1995 to 1998 union officials spent $1.5 million on car
services that were not allowed according to union regulations.
For example, Local 1549 President Al Diop, representing clerical
workers, received about $135,000 to lease a car for four years.
Mr. Diop has already been convicted of stealing more than $2 million
from the union, and for his role in fixing the contract vote.
The report examines the corruption of some of the union officials
who have not been prosecuted by the district attorney's office.
For example, Arthur Tibaldi, after 28 years as DC 37 treasurer
and four decades as a local president representing accountants,
was given $578,000 when he retired in 1995. This included $169,000
for severance pay, $223,000 in deferred compensation benefits,
a $100,000 one-year consulting contract, and the use of a leased
car worth more than $49,000. KPMG found no evidence that Mr. Tibaldi
did any consulting work. Mr. Tibaldi's fellow union leaders also
gave him an Alaska cruise worth more than $12,000 as a retirement
present, undoubtedly as a token of appreciation for his services
as the council's treasurer.
Stanley Hill, the former executive director of DC 37, was never
indicted. The audit makes clear, however, that he benefited handsomely
from his position. For example, Mr. Hill and his wife stayed at
a $1,000 a night executive suite for eight nights during a 1998
union convention held in Hawaii. As a whole, union officials spent
more than $140,000 during this convention, including $11,800 for
alcohol and other amenities in just one night. Including travel
expenses, the junket emptied the union treasury of more than $1.1
million. Hill resigned in February 1999, after the scandal became
public. Hill has made no comment on the audit.
Victor Gotbaum, the executive director of the council before
Hill, received more than $183,000 in severance pay and deferred
compensation when he retired in 1987. He also received $444,000
for consulting fees for the union, and expenses associated with
car use up until October 1998. Neither DC 37 spokesmen nor Gotbaum
have commented on his role as described in the audit.
Two union officials charged with corruption by the district
attorney were also mentioned in the report for having received
questionable payments when they were compelled to retire in 1998
after admitted their role in fixing the 1996 contract vote. Mr.
Lubin claimed 239 unused days, for which he received $147,352,
and Mr. Shaplo claimed 197 unused days, for which he received
$84,558. KPMG said that there was no data to support any of these
claims and payments.
During the four-year period the audit examined, the union's
assets plummeted from $20 million in 1995 to $3.5 million by the
end of 1998.
In the midst of the DC 37 scandal, there have been revelations
of corruption in other unions in New York City. For example, the
former local president of the Service Employees International
Union (SEIU) Local 32B-32J had an annual income of $412,000, about
20 times the salary of those he claimed to represent. He ran the
union with dictatorial control and, in addition to other perks,
had a lavish penthouse office paid for from the union treasury.
One of the previous presidents of 32B-32J was John Sweeney, who
now heads the national AFL-CIO.
Last year, Transport Workers Union Local (TWU) 100, representing
36,000 transit employees, admitted that its eight top officers,
including the president and the secretary-treasurer, had used
their union credit cards for personal expenses. Also last year,
the Manhattan District Attorney charged 38 construction union
leaders, contractors and reputed mobsters with bribery, bid-rigging,
and other racketeering schemes involving millions of dollars.
AFSCME had hoped to use the information generated by the audit
to give the appearance that the parent union would take action
to clean up the New York Council. However, the report has proven
to be nothing less than an embarrassment to a labor leadership
that is desperately seeking to maintain that the union can function
in the interests of the membership.
For example, reformers have maintained that the undemocratic
system under which internal union elections are conducted makes
it easier for corruption to take place. Instead of using a secret
ballot giving every rank-and-file member a vote, elections have
been conducted in such a way that the local unions can vote their
membership as a bloc. This means that the executive director of
DC 37 is selected by an appointed executive board, the majority
of which is essentially determined by the two or three locals
with the largest membership. It is no accident that the presidents
of two locals wielding the greatest power in the council were
also the most corrupt. In addition, more than half of the officials
who were on the 28-person executive board in 1998 have been convicted
of stealing from the union treasury.
One of the officials who voted with the majority to maintain
the undemocratic voting system was one of the union's leading
reformersCharles Ensley, president of Social
Service Employees' Union Local 371, the third largest of the 56
locals. When asked about the executive board's decision to maintain
the old crony system, Saunders said, I don't have the ability
to wave a magic wand. I still have to follow the constitution
of DC 37.
The No. 2 official in the council, Helen Greene, was also indicted
in late April on embezzlement charges. Among other things, she
was charged with using her union credit card for personal expenses
such as clothing, electronic equipment, a car lease, and paying
for a rehearsal dinner for her son's wedding. The indictment was
a major blow to the union hierarchy because she had been one of
the local leaders who had not been implicated in the corruption
scandal. For this reason, she had been elected to the national
union's executive board, and was slated to run for the top post
of the council. Ms. Greene's indictment is a direct result of
the new information gathered by the KPMG audit. In addition to
Ms. Greene, the information discovered by the audit has resulted
in the indictments of two other union officials for stealing union
money.
It is significant that the two municipal unions exposed for
corruptionDC37and TWU Local 100have also agreed to
the Work Experience Program that has forced thousands of welfare
recipients to do the jobs of city employees, receiving only their
welfare benefits as payment. This has made it possible to replace
thousands of civil service workers with welfare recipients, who
have been coerced into a form of forced labor.
See Also:
Further revelations
of corruption in New York City unions
[29 September 2000]
New York
City municipal unions rigged contract vote
[25 November 1998]
Corruption scandal
engulfs New York union officials
[14 February 1998]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |