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Public Employee Press By DIANE S. WILLIAMS 70 percent vote No Charter revision advocates appeared
to count on record-low voter turnout and spent millions of dollars on
phone calls and mailings to sway public opinion. But DC 37 and the Central
Labor Council launched a massive and successful get-out-the-vote
campaign aimed at the municipal workforce. Ultimately, labor trounced
the Charter Revision Commissions proposal by an overwhelming 70
percent margin. Members received mailings, palm cards,
posters and a special edition of PEP urging them to vote down the proposals.
The union literature explained how their jobs would be affected
or possibly eliminated if the charter changes passed. Voters passed Ballot Proposal 1,
which extends the 1963 law allowing municipalities to borrow for sewer
system repairs without having to postpone building roads and schools,
and voted down Proposals 2 through 5. Proposal 6 was withdrawn from the
ballot at the last minute. In close races such as those in Washington
Heights, Staten Island and Brooklyn, City Council members Miguel Martinez
of District 10, Michael McMahon of District 49, and Vincent Gentile of
District 43 prevailed with the help of DC 37 volunteers who campaigned
in those communities. The momentum from the unions
Fair Contract Now! rally Oct. 29 at City Hall, attended by an estimated
20,000 DC 37 members, was a catalyst for victory, said Political
Action Director Wanda Williams. At the rally, DC 37 members, who have worked without a contract for 17 months, stood under a rainy night sky to demand from the mayor a new contract and pay increases to meet the ever-rising cost of living in the Big Apple. Ms. Roberts said, On Election
Day, we used our voting power to put politicians on notice that the people
always have the final say on the citys future.
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