Patriot Action Network

-By James Sherk, The Heritage Foundation

Two of the most important results from last Tuesday’s primary have been drowned out by the coverage of other races. Voters in Chula Vista, CA passed measure G by a 56 to 44 percent margin while voters in Oceanside, CA passed measure K by a 54 to 46 percent margin. These measures prohibit discriminatory “project labor agreements” (PLAs) on city-funded construction projects.

A project labor agreement forces contractors to negotiate a collective bargaining agreement before starting work. In practice this means that work on PLA-covered projects goes to union members at union rates – nonunion workers need not apply. Unsurprisingly unions love PLAs and use their political influence to attach them to as many government construction projects as they can.

Of course paying union rates and shutting down competition from the 85 percent of construction workers who are not union members raises costs. The Beacon Hill Institute estimates that PLAs increase construction costs by 12 to 18 percent. Taxpayers face a hefty tab when the government sets construction projects aside for union members.

On Tuesday voters in Chula Vista and Oceanside decided enough was enough. By banning discriminatory project labor agreements they required their cities to spend their tax dollars wisely – no matter how much unions lobby for a sweetheart deal. If only the Federal government would do the same.

When President Bush took office he signed an Executive Order banning the use of project labor agreements on federal construction projects. This saved taxpayers between $1.6 and $2.6 billion in 2008. However, President Obama repealed this directive almost as soon as he took office.

In its place he put an Executive Order encouraging federal agencies to pursue PLAs on federally funded projects worth more than $25 million. The regulations implementing this Executive Order took effect this past April. Requiring federal agencies to use PLAs richly rewards union lobbyists, but it will add billions to the deficit and leave nonunion workers in the cold.

This is not the only special-interest favor Obama has given to unions. Consider that the Administration has also:

Project labor agreements are political favoritism at its worst. Hopefully Tuesday’s election shows that voters are tiring of special-interest union handouts.

Co-authored by Young Leaders Program members Alexi Himarios and Bethany Aronhalt. For more information on interning at Heritage, please visit: http://www.heritage.org/about/departments/ylp.cfm.

 

The outrage of union activities never ceases to amaze. From the Education Week blog we find that the United Federation of Teachers (UFT), the teachers union of New York, spends almost $200,000 a year of its member’s dues money on an office in Boca Raton, Florida! As EdWeek drolly says, “That’s not peanuts for a union fretting about its financially strapped members.”

Turns out that the reason the office exists is because of a union perk to retired teachers: permanent summer jobs at nearly $50 and hour.

According to Ed Week it’s called “retention rights.” The deal is that teachers with long tenure can come back each summer from their cushy retirement homes in Florida and take summer teaching jobs that would otherwise go to current, working teachers. These retired teachers essentially have first dibs on those summer jobs above the claims of the current workforce of New York educators. Retired teachers have a huge vested interest in keeping tabs on their old union, vote heavily to retain this perk, and they make huge cash taking advantage of the perk. So, the Boca office is there to serve them.

Ed Week details how lucrative this perk is for retired teachers.

One reliable source in the NYCDOE estimates that there are “hundreds of teachers who take advantage of retention rights.” At the per session hourly rate of $41.98, with average summer school lengths ranging from 60 to 150 hours, the average per session teacher is earning between $2,500 and $6,300–that’s probably a million bucks or more a year that snow birds are claiming from current teachers.

So, “retired” doesn’t mean a whole lot when it comes to taking summer jobs away from the working teachers apparently. The whole thing reminds me of a quote by the Michael Corleone character from The Godfather, “Just when I thought I was out,” he said, “they pull me back in. ” Only this time it would be the working teachers on the outside looking in while the gray-mafia of retired teachers come up each year from Florida to muscle them aside for the rich summer takings.

Seriously, I never thought I’d feel sorry for a union member, but in this case, the working teachers of New York are getting screwed by their own elderly brethren! The swipe from family is the unkindest cut of all.

Hat Tip: Ed Lasky and American Thinker

 

(Eds Note: Peter Scheer has a great editorial that is another example of how unions are quickly wearing out their welcome with the American people. Scheer is from www.firstamendmentcoalition.org.)

-By Peter Scheer

For public employee unions – those representing police, firefighters, teachers, prison guards and agency workers of all kinds at the state and local levels – these are the worst of times.

Despite record high membership and dues, and years of unparalleled clout in state capitols, public-sector unions find themselves on the defensive, desperately trying to hold onto past gains in the face of a skeptical press and angry voters. So far has the zeitgeist shifted against them that on one recent weekend, government employees were the butt of a “Saturday Night Live” skit, and the next day, a New York Times Magazine cover article proclaimed “The Teachers’ Unions’ Last Stand.”

Public unions’ traditional strength – the ability to finance their members’ rising pay and benefits through tax increases – has become a liability. Although private-sector unions always have had to worry that consumers will resist rising prices for their goods, public sector unions have benefited from the fact that taxpayers can’t choose – they are, in effect, “captive consumers.”

At some point, however, voters turn resentful as they sense that:

– They are underwriting, through their taxes, a level of salary and benefits for government employment that is better than what they and their families have.

– Government services, from schools to the Department of Motor Vehicles, are not good enough – not for the citizen individually nor the public generally – to justify the high and escalating cost.

We are at that point.

In California, government-sector unions, once among the most entrenched and powerful labor groups in the country, mainly have themselves to blame. For most of the postwar period, they were a force for progressive change, prospering by winning over public support for their agenda.

In the 1970s and ’80s they backed laws like the Public Records Act and Brown Act to make state and local government more transparent. Because unions enjoyed broad-based political support, efforts to enhance government accountability and responsiveness to voters were seen – correctly – as benefiting the unions and their members. The public interest and public employees’ interests were aligned.

But the unions switched strategies. Although the change was gradual, by the 1990s, California’s government unions had decided that, rather than cultivate voter support for their objectives, they could exert more influence in the Legislature, and in the political process generally, by lavishing campaign contributions on lawmakers. Adopting the tactics of other special-interest groups, government unions paid lip service to democratic principles while excelling at the fundamentally anti-democratic strategy of writing checks to legislators, their election committees and political action committees.

While not illegal (in fact, such contributions are constitutionally protected), the unions’ aggressive spending on candidates put them on the same moral low ground as casino-owning tribes, insurance companies and other special interests that have concluded that the best way to influence the legislative process is to, well, buy it.

Public unions’ distrust of voters, and abandonment of government transparency as a union objective, could be seen in their successful push, in the mid-1990s, for a change to the Brown Act, California’s open-meeting law. The new provision ensured that the public would have no access to collective-bargaining agreements negotiated by cities and counties – often representing 70 percent or more of their total operating budgets – until after the agreements were signed.

What happens when voters and the press have no opportunity to question elected officials about how they propose to pay for a lower retirement age, better health benefits for retirees’ dependents, richer pension formulas and the like? The officials make contractual promises that are unaffordable, unsustainable and, in general, don’t come due until after those elected officials have left office. In the case of Vallejo, this veil of secrecy and the symbiotic relationship it fosters led to municipal bankruptcy.

The biggest blow to unions’ public support has come from revelations about jaw-dropping compensation and pension benefits. Police have received unwelcome attention for budget-busting overtime and the manipulation of eligibility rules for “disability pensions,” which provide higher benefits and tax advantages. Other government employees, particularly managers, have been called out for “pension spiking”: using vacation time, sick pay and the like to boost income in the last years of employment, which are the basis for calculating retirement benefits.

Such gaming of the system boosts starting pensions to levels that can approach, and even exceed, employees’ salaries. Some examples from the reporting of the Contra Costa Times’ Daniel Borenstein: A retired Northern California fire chief whose $185,000 salary morphed into a $241,000 annual pension; a county administrator whose $240,000 starting pension was 98 percent of final salary; and a sanitary district manager who qualified for a $217,000 pension on a salary of $234,000. At a time when most Californians anticipate an austere retirement (if they can afford to retire at all), government pensions are a source of real voter anger.

The harm to the credibility of public employee unions from these excesses is made far worse by the unions’ attempts to hide them. The revelations about pay and pension abuses have surfaced only as a result of lawsuits. (The First Amendment Coalition has been a plaintiff in several of these cases.) Public employee unions, could have, and should have, taken the lead to stop abusive pension practices, which mainly involve managers and other senior staff. Instead, they have vigorously opposed disclosure of individual employees’ salaries and pension amounts.

Public employee unions need to reboot. The old strategy of cynically buying political influence and excluding the public from decision making has run its course. Unions can rebuild public support by recommitting to an agenda of open government in the public interest. If they don’t, they will be further marginalized.

Peter Scheer, a lawyer and journalist, is executive director of the First Amendment Coalition, a California nonprofit dedicated to government transparency and political accountability. Contact him at www.firstamendmentcoalition.org.

 

For those of you that have come to the blog often, there is a constant theme: unions are antithetical to good government. We’ve been saying this here for years, of course, but over this campaign season I think that meme is beginning to gain real traction because stories echoing this sentiment are everywhere these days.

Jay Ambrose has another such piece at Real Clear Politics this weekend.

Ambrose says that public employee unions are bankrupting both the state treasuries and the federal government so that their “members can live much better on average than those of us in the private sector.”

Spot on.

Ambrose gives us an example of the sort of outrage of which he speaks.

To get a better idea of how this works, meet Hugo Tassone, a Yonkers police officer who retired three years ago at age 44 earning a salary of $74,000 a year. Now receiving an annual pension of $101,333, he raised the amount to that sum by working scads of overtime in his last year on the job, it’s reported.

Unfortunately, Hugo Tassone is not at all uncommon. There are Tassones throughout our governments at all levels.

Ambrose has some other great points in his piece, too. Do click on over to Real Clear Politics and give it a read.

 

Joseph Carafano of the Heritage Foundation has made an interesting observation and wonders if President Obama is allowing unions to make it harder to effect a timely and effective cleanup of the BP oil spill in the Gulf?

The offer of aid from foreign companies has been refused by the Obama administration and the Jones Act is cited as the reason why Obama will not allow foreign ships to enter our waters to assist in the cleanup.

The Jones Act is a 1920s protectionist law put in place to assure that boats and crews working in American waters are American crews and union members. Carafano thinks that Obama is using the Jones Act as a sop to unions despite what it is doing to slow the cleanup.

“Cause this is a big thing for unions,” Carafano said. “The unions see it as … protecting jobs. They hate when the Jones Act gets waived, and they pound on politicians when they do that. So … are we giving in to unions and not doing everything we can, or is there some kind of impediment that we don’t know about?

Once again, just as with car manufacturing and education, we see unions getting in the way of best practices, safety, and the creation of the optimal American lifestyle. In this case, we see President Obama paying unions back as wildlife dies and the livelihood of millions of American is destroyed for decades to come.

 

The indispensable Mark Hemingway of the Washington Examiner recently caught another union outrage. This time it’s the teachers union in New Jersey trying to extort cash from parents directly, as opposed to merely extorting cash from parents through their taxes.

Hemingway alerts us to a New Jersey parent that was aghast that the NJ teachers union would be so blatant as to send a letter home with her child suggesting a novel new way to raise funds for teachers.

As both she and the letter she handed me stated, my daughter was to accomplish chores around the house with the goal of being paid by me for those chores the sum of $20. She would then have to hand the full $20 over to the school to make up for the shortfall in their overall budget which, ultimately, disallowed the kids to go on yet another class trip.

This parent was so incensed at the “mandatory” aspect of the fund raising letter that she called the school to complain. She was assured that despite all the rhetoric about it being mandatory, it was just a “suggestion.” The parent was, of course, skeptical of the later claim.

Hemingway also notes that this isn’t a lone circumstance of such outrageous union chutzpah. Apparently in California the teachers union there sent out letters demanding that every parent in the state submit a payment of $375 per family to help save teacher’s jobs and protect them from state cuts. This on top of all the taxes people already pay the state to fund education!

These union thugs don’t lack for audacity, do they?