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New York Mayor Bloomberg reaches concessions deal with citys
biggest union
By Peter Daniels
27 April 2004
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The tentative contract agreement announced last week between
the administration of New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg and
the municipal workers union representing more than 120,000 city
employees imposes anti-working class concessions sought by big
business and its political representatives in New York for more
than 20 years.
As Bloomberg himself noted with satisfaction, the contract
establishes the principle of tying any and all wage
and benefit improvements to savings generated by the workers themselves
through increased productivity and other concessions. Billionaire
Bloomberg secured a deal that stipulates, among other two-tier
provisions, that all workers hired after July 2004 will be paid
15 percent less than their fellow employees in their first two
years on the job.
The members of District Council 37 (DC 37) of the American
Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME),
comprising hospital workers, clerical and office workers, social
workers and a range of other blue- and white-collar employees,
have been working without a contract for two years. The proposed
three-year agreement would expire in July 2005, only 14 months
from now. It gives the workers a grand total of 5 percent in pay
increases plus a $1,000 signing bonus over the three-year
period, below the rise in living costs. Inflation, in fact, shows
signs of stirring, with the Bureau of Labor Statistics reporting
price increases in New York City of more than 1 percent in the
most recent month alone.
The $1,000 bonus covers the first year of the long-awaited
contract, and the city agreed to grant a 3 percent increase retroactively
to July 2003; but in return, the DC 37 leaders agreed to the lower
pay, along with cuts in sick days, holidays and vacation time,
for new workers. The measly 2 percent increase set for this July
is tied completely to these wage and benefit cutbacks. Furthermore,
the union bureaucrats agreed to the establishment of a committee
of city and union officials to look for additional productivity
savings to fund another 1 percent pay increase in the final year
of the agreement.
The contract establishes a two-tier system for New York City
employees for the first time since the citys brush with
bankruptcy in 1975. Both the city and the union justified the
layoffs and cuts in pensions and benefits imposed at that time
as emergency measures to forestall a collapse of the citys
finances. Today, however, even as the citys finances are
improving somewhat from the slump of the last few years, Bloomberg
sees no need to make any such argument
The spokesmen of the business establishment, who habitually
chide New York City mayors for losing their nerve and failing
to impose sufficiently harsh conditions on city workers, pronounced
themselves pleased with the latest agreement. The research director
of the Citizens Budget Commission declared, This settlement
in fact has cash savings from the 15 percent pay cut, and those
savings are real. A lot of the productivity stuff we heard about
in previous contracts wasnt real. The New York
Times added its praise for Bloomberg, lauding the important
principle that workers must produce savings to pay for their own
wage increases.
The media and the economic and political establishment see
no need for the slightest sacrifice among the Wall Street brokers
and dealmakers, who received million-dollar bonuses several months
ago. They arent concerned when the city hands out hefty
increases to its already highly paid managers and department heads,
or when Bloomberg proposes hundreds of millions of dollars in
tax breaks and other aid to the multimillionaire developers who
propose to build a new stadium in Brooklyn for the New Jersey
Nets basketball franchise.
Furthermore, the policyalmost uniformly accepted in union
contracts for decades, that workers deserve some protection against
rises in living costs over which they have no controlis
not one of Bloombergs principles. He sees no
need to even mention the matter.
Bloomberg is not the first mayor to attack the wages and conditions
of city employees, of course. His predecessor Rudolph Giuliani
regularly demeaned city employees, but Bloomberg has gone further.
As far as the ruling elite is concerned, this man, truly one of
their own, has spoken more softly but carried a big stick.
This development demonstrates what many workers have long since
recognizedthat Bloombergs softer style
in comparison to Giuliani means absolutely nothing. Whoever occupies
the office of mayor continues to try to roll back living standards
and working conditions, while presiding over a steadily widening
gulf between the rich and poor, a gap that has now surpassed the
level of social polarization of the early decades of the twentieth
century. Behind these attacks is not simply greed, but the needs
of the profit system itself.
Bloombergs attacks on city workers are part of a broader
assault on every section of the working class. On the education
front, the mayor has just implemented his reactionary policy against
social promotion, the demagogic plan to hold back
thousands of third-grade students if they do not pass standardized
tests. This policy of cracking down on eight-year-olds who are
having difficulties in school is a means of obscuring the fact
that the city has refused to spend what is needed to build more
schools and classrooms, or provide even the minimum supplies and
programs for existing schools.
Similarly, Bloomberg declared his support for the citys
implementation of a rule that mandates all able-bodied residents
of the citys housing projects who are not employed to put
in a minimum eight hours of volunteer work per month. This effort
stigmatizes the poorer sections of the working class as freeloaders.
Just as with the city employees who are supposed to pay for their
own raises, the poor are supposed to give back at
least partial payment for the privilege of paying
subsidized rents. There is no call from City Hall, however, for
the wealthy who benefit from real estate tax breaks on their cooperative
and condominium apartments to similarly perform unpaid labor.
Bloomberg, whom polls show to be unpopular with a majority
of the citys voters, is able to carry out the above policies
because he faces no organized opposition. This is bound up both
with the bipartisan support for these attacks on city employees,
and with the role of the city unions and the entire trade union
bureaucracy.
To say that DC 37s surrender of wages and benefits shows
simply that the unions are weak or helpless would not accurately
sum up the present situation. The city workers have long since
been abandoned by the organizations they joined and helped to
build decades earlier. DC 37 is a particularly instructive example.
The union has been wracked by crisis for years. A corruption scandal
that erupted in 1998 showed that union officials who were lining
their own pockets were at the very same time rigging a contract
vote to impose an earlier batch of concessions sought by the Giuliani
administration.
The AFSCME international was forced to place DC 37 in receivership,
and former union official Lillian Roberts, now 74 years old, was
later brought back from retirement to head the local union. It
is Ms. Roberts who negotiated the latest contract, which she declared
did not come easy.... We have delivered the best possible
contract we could for our members.
The DC 37 leadership is currently embroiled in a factional
dispute so bitter that the contending groups can barely meet in
the same room. Roberts narrowly won reelection some months ago,
based on a vote of the unions delegates, but her opponents,
led by Charles Ensley of the social services local, control the
unions executive board.
Ensleys faction includes officials who declare that the
union has not sufficiently rooted out corruption. Significantly,
however, when it came time for DC 37s local union presidents
to vote on the tentative contract, 54 out of 56, including the
opposition faction, voted to recommend it for a membership
vote.
The problem goes far deeper than that of corrupt leadership.
The trade union bureaucracy and all of its factions agree with
Bloombergs principles. They accept the profit
system and its needs as sacrosanct, the holy of holies, and everything
flows from this.
If the concessions contract passes, it will not be because
workers are satisfied with it, but because they see no alternative.
Not even the most elementary rights, rights that were taken for
granted in past decades, can be defended today through the outmoded
organizations of the misnamed labor movement. What
is required is a leadership based on a new perspective, which
challenges the profit system and the polarization and inequality
that it breeds.
See Also:
New Yorks new
mayor demands austerity
[7 January 2002]
New report details
corruption of New Yorks municipal workers union
[30 May 2001]
Further revelations
of corruption in New York City unions
[29 September 2000]
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