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Layoffs plague Detroit city services
By our correspondent
26 August 2004
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Nearly 400 Detroit city workers were laid off this summer by
the Democratic mayor of Detroit, Kwame Kilpatrick. These layoffs
are in addition to the thousands of jobs being cut from the Detroit
public schools. The city has a deficit of $333 million dollars,
and is targeting city services to make up the shortfall.

Kilpatrick has lavished tax breaks and incentives on big business
while telling residents there is no money for vital services.
Millions have been poured into the coffers of real estate and
other business interests as the city prepares to host the Super
Bowl XL football game in 2006.
Among the layoffs are workers in vital areas such as the Water
Department, where 40 jobs were lost. Half of the 60 coach service
attendants and 40 auto mechanics were axed in the Department of
Transportation.
According to workers at the Detroit Department of Transportation,
due to the large number of buses in disrepair, only 150 of the
400 buses designated for peak hours are on the road. Detroit schools
open this week, and thousands of students rely on city buses to
get to class. Every day, 150,000 ride the buses in Detroit. One
in four Detroit households has no access to a private automobile,
making bus service a vital necessity. Detroit has no rapid transit
system, and the regular bus service in the greater Detroit area,
including its suburbs, is abysmal.
Last week, a group of disabled Detroit residents filed suit
against the city and the US Department of Transportation because
half the wheelchair lifts are broken on the citys fleet.
The bus drivers cannot pick up disabled passengers without the
lifts. One wheelchair user reported waiting three hours near downtown
to take a 10-minute bus ride.
At an August rally of Detroit city workers organized to oppose
the cuts, Ken Gray, a worker in the water and sewage department,
told the World Socialist Web Site: The city administration
is finding ways to milk money out of the system. It has a domino
effect on service. I think what youre seeing is the beginning
of the end of decent services in the city. Its going to
be catastrophic for a lot of people. It just bothers me that some
people are making themselves rich off of it. Its like theyre
developing a caste system. But its not just in Detroit that
this is happening.
Todd Graves, a laid-off coach service attendant, said: Nobody
cares about the little person. Instead of cutting at the higher
level, cutting their salaries, they are cutting us. We dont
even get cost-of-living increases. A lot of us are single parents.
I was a department manager at Kmart before this job. I thought
that I was getting a more secure job.
AFSCME Local 312 leaders say the mayor is outsourcing bus repair
work at a high cost to the city. According to John Miller of the
unions grievance committee, 10 of the laid-off mechanics
may be brought back as foremen. In the past, the union and city
have been at odds about overtime pay required to keep the aging
fleet of buses running.
At a special Detroit City Council Town Hall Meeting in July,
city workers and their supporters spoke out against the cuts.
But a call for a citywide strike to stop the layoffs was shunted
aside. AFSCME Council 25 has no intention of organizing any action
that would cut across their support for the Kerry and the Democratic
Party.
See Also:
Detroit school workers organize
wildcat strike against job cuts
[23 June 2004]
Detroit schools to cut 3,200
jobs
[3 April 2004]
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