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N.Y. Labor Unions Are Biting The Hand That Fattens Them By E. J. McMahon
Talk about ingratitude. Some of New Yorks top labor leaders are making it known that they may not support the reelection of David Paterson, long one of their most steadfast allies in Albany. Its not as if this governor wasnt already doing everything in his power to minimize the recessions impact on organized labor in New York. Paterson caved to the unions top state budget priority - a record increase in personal income taxes - after saying for months that it would be a bad idea. And thats not all. The governor also:
While governors in other hard-pressed states are actually reducing the salaries of their public workers, Patersons failure to wring significant concessions out of New Yorks public employees unions has been especially notable. In the face of a $15 billion budget gap, he only meekly requested a wage freeze and a reduction in retiree health benefits from state unions - waiting until the final days of budget negotiations to warn of layoffs if givebacks werent forthcoming. Then, barely two months after the layoff threat, the governor rescinded it and backed off his request for a wage freeze - in exchange for the unions permission to let him offer $20,000 retirement incentives to 4,400 nonessential employees. The unions also agreed to drop their opposition to the governors proposal to enroll future government workers in a new “tier” of pension benefits only slightly less lavish than those available to current employees. Under Patersons plan, public pensions in New York would remain far more generous than those typically available in the private sector. Most important of all, from the union standpoint, the existing defined-benefit system would be preserved, despite the billions in added costs it will soon impose on taxpayers. To his credit, Paterson did veto an extension of increasingly unaffordable pensions for cops and firefighters. But his proposed replacement plan hasnt even been voted on by the Assembly, much less the chaotic Senate, so the issue remains in limbo. Ironically, the more Paterson panders to unions, the more he narrows his budgetary options and feeds the impression that he isnt really in control, and the lower his job-approval ratings drop - accelerating a spiral of political decline that now has him in danger of losing union support. Theres an important lesson in this for Andrew Cuomo and New Yorks other potential gubernatorial candidates, Democrat and Republican alike. Embracing the organized labor agenda may win you the backing of New Yorks richest, best-organized special interest groups and of the political machines they control. But it will ultimately cost you the enduring support of just about everyone else, because the untrammeled power of labor unions in New York - especially government employee unions - shapes up as the single greatest obstacle to the Empire States economic and fiscal recovery. In the end, what the unions fear most is being on the losing side. What they respect most is power, effectively wielded by a credible leader. And that is why they are on the verge of abandoning the best friend they ever had in New Yorks governors office. ©2009 New York Daily News
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