By GREGORY N. HEIRES
To combat looming layoffs and a $3.4 billion projected budget gap,
DC 37 prepared to press for a fair contract at a bargaining session
scheduled for March 25, after PEP went to press.
The union planned to respond to the city’s demands and to modify
its own demands, said Dennis Sullivan, director of the DC 37 Research
and Negotiations Dept.
Mr. Sullivan has said that the union faces the most challenging bargaining
conditions since the mid-1970s, when the city was on the brink of
bankruptcy.
“The bottom line is that you have to keep your eye on the prize,”
Mr. Sullivan told a crowd of 1,000 stewards and political activists,
who gathered March 13 at union headquarters to mobilize for a contract
demonstration on April 29. DC 37 Executive Director Lillian Roberts
expressed hope that the unity exhibited at the meeting would translate
into power and leverage at the bargaining table.
Bargaining continues as the city grapples with the huge budget deficit
and a local economy battered by the effects of the attack on the World
Trade Center and the recession. In January, the city’s unemployment
rate hit 8.6 percent, significantly higher than the national average
of 5.7 percent.
Complicating the contract talks, Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg has demanded
$600 million in benefit givebacks from municipal unions and noted
that $600 million is equivalent to 12,000 jobs.
The unions have been battling the proposed concessions, which include
payless furloughs, co-payments for health-care premiums, a new, leaner
pension tier for incoming workers, smaller city contributions to union
welfare funds and the elimination` of Medicare Part B reimbursements.
In March, the DC 37 Executive Board voted against accepting benefit
cuts. A joint committee of the city and the Municipal Labor Committee,
an umbrella group of city unions, is studying possible savings, including
delays in certain city payments to pension funds that could occur
without affecting benefits.
Ms. Roberts points out that the unions have helped the city before
in fiscal emergencies. “We’re not averse to doing our part
— but it has to be a two-way street. The contract we’re
negotiating and saving our jobs are related,” she said.
At a meeting on March 6, members of the DC 37 Bargaining Caucus —
a 300-strong group that serves as a link between the union leadership
and rank-and-file members during contract talks — urged the union
to fight concessions. At the meeting, top union leaders and staff
described how DC 37 is working to stop layoffs and mobilizing for
the contract.
“We have to stand together,” said Local 924 President Kyle
Simmons. “We have to make sure that we are not going to give
anything back.”
“My members are very clear,” said Local 371 President Charles
Ensley. “We have nothing to give back and we need a raise.”
“If you want a fair contract,” Ms. Roberts urged members,
“you have to be part of the fight. We need every member at the
rally at City Hall from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. on April 29.”