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New York City mayor announces 3400 layoffs
Six firehouses, two companies to be closed
By Jeremy Johnson
9 April 2003
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New York Citys billionaire Mayor Michael Bloomberg issued
notices Monday to 3,400 city workers that they will be laid off
in 30 days. Job cuts will affect everyone from secretaries to
sanitation workers, welfare office staff, teachers aides,
computer technicians and civilian employees of the Fire Department.
On the same day, Bloomberg issued a 45-day notice on the closing
of six firehouses and two other firefighting companies, consolidating
the disbanded units into others for a cost savings of $10.8 million
a year.
The layoff notices were issued after Bloomberg rejected proposals
from the public employee union umbrella group, the Municipal Labor
Committee (MLC), for $600 million in productivity savings
that the city had demanded. Bloomberg is insisting on longer workdays
and health care cost sharing, while union leaders proposed an
early retirement program for teachers, higher medical co-payments
for many workers, a loan to the city out of union pension funds,
and switching outside work from high-cost contractors to low-paid
city workers.
City budget officials indicated that the layoffs would not
be rescinded even if the unions agreed to the concessions demanded,
in view of the ballooning budget deficit, now estimated at $3.5
billion and growing. Revenues continue to drop, as the bursting
of the Wall Street bubble has virtually dried up tax receipts
on capital gains while reducing both corporate and personal income
taxes. The economic slowdown has increased the citys official
unemployment rate to 8.6 percent, nearly 50 percent higher than
the national average. This, on top of a decade of corporate tax
cuts and abatements carried out in the 1990s, has left the city
on the brink of bankruptcy.
The layoffs come as Bloomberg has asked city agencies to prepare
yet another $1 billion in cuts in the event that requested state
and federal assistance does not come through. At a time when the
Republicans are pushing through massive additional tax cuts in
Washington, and New York State is facing an estimated $11.5 billion
deficit of its own, nobody realistically expects much, if any,
additional funding from either source. In fact, New York Governor
George Patakis proposed state budget calls for reductions
of $450 million to the citys schools and another $200 million
to public hospitals.
Bloombergs plan to raise over $900 million by re-imposing
an income tax on commuters from the suburbs is considered dead
in the water in face of opposition from Governor Pataki and key
state legislators, who would have to pass authorizing legislation.
If it were passed, Bloombergs proposal would substantially
reduce income taxes on wealthy New York City residents while shifting
the burden to mostly middle-income commuters.
Randi Weingarten, head of the New York City teachers
union and spokesperson for the MLC, proposed an alternative of
taxing commuters but at a lower rate, while imposing a 1 percent
tax surcharge on New Yorks wealthiest. The proposal is a
public relations exercise, as the union bureaucracy knows full
well that a tax surcharge on the rich stands even less chance
of passage in Albany than Bloombergs proposal. Weingarten,
along with Dennis Rivera of the health care workers union,
were two of the most prominent union officials who endorsed and
actively campaigned for Governor Patakis reelection last
fall.
Although Bloombergwhose election campaign promised layoffs
only as a last resorthas laid off 600 workers
and cut another 14,000 jobs through attrition in the 15 months
he has been in office, these new job cuts are the first broad-based
layoffs imposed on New York City workers since 1991. Then, when
the city was gripped by recession in the aftermath of the first
Persian Gulf War, former mayor David Dinkins axed 6,000 jobs.
In the fiscal crisis of the mid-1970s, some 65,000 municipal
jobs were lost, and the unions gave massive concessions and opened
up their pension funds to bail the city out from bankruptcy. Citys
finances were taken over by the State Financial Control Board.
The board still exists and stands at the ready to take over once
again and impose the most draconian solutions should the city
fail to produce a balanced budget by the July 1 deadline.
Indeed, rumors are circulating that bond rating agencies are
demanding that the Bloomberg administration show its ability to
get tough and carry out sizeable layoffs as a condition for maintaining
the citys bond rating. The financial moguls who ultimately
call the shots are fully aware that the layoffs just announced
represent only a down payment on what is required in the long
run. In the coming months, Bloomberg aides have threatened to
impose at least 15,000 layoffs in all if union concessions and
hoped for state aid do not come through.
While the effects on the budget are much smaller, the closing
down of six firehouses and the elimination of two other engine
companiesin the face of strong public oppositionalso
shows the determination of the Bloomberg administration to subordinate
the will of the people to that of the bankers.
The lauding of the firefighters as heroes after 343 of them
died attempting to rescue people from the World Trade Center during
the September 11 terrorist attacks has been shelved in the face
of financial pressures. The cutbacks also expose the hypocrisy
involved in the constant issuing of terror alerts, given that
firefighters would be the first responders in the event of a real
attack.
Long sought by the Bloomberg administration, the closings were
only postponed last fall as part of the mayors negotiations
with the City Council to pass an 18.5 percent increase in the
property tax rate effective January 1.
In the interim, rather than challenge the basic premise of
the citys fiscal crisis, firefighter union leaders have
floated the idea of corporate sponsorship of different
firehouses. While not specific as to just what this would mean,
it would likely involve corporate naming rights similar to most
major sports arenas. The obvious question is whether corporate
sponsors would also be able to buy special firefighting services
not provided to the general public.
The idea of such corporate sponsorship, which reportedly is
being considered for other city services as well, would represent
a first step toward wholesale privatization. Indeed, in the nineteenth
century firehouses were owned and operated by insurance companies
and would only extinguish fires on the premises of their policyholders.
See Also:
Economic Perfect Storm
threatens to wreck US public education
New York governor threatens $1.24 billion in school cuts
[20 February 2003]
Mayor Bloomberg takes
ax to New York City budget
[15 November 2002]
Union delegates
denounce government hypocrisy over September 11
US firefighters protest Bushs veto
[21 August 2002]
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