Outten & Golden: Empowering Employees in the Workplace

Target Wall Street Greed, Not Public Employees

August 31st, 2010 | Tula Connell

Credit: Joe Kekeris

Credit: Joe Kekeris

Too often when economic times get tough, scapegoats are found in the wrong places. Wall Street greed and double-dealing sparked much of the nation’s recent near-financial collapse, yet many in the chattering classes instead are attacking public employees for this rolling recession.

Economist Dean Baker puts the situation in perspective:

Fifteen million people are not out of work because of generous public employee pensions. Nor is this the reason that millions of homeowners are underwater in their mortgages and facing the loss of their home. In fact, if we cut all public employee pensions in half tomorrow, it would not create a single job or save anyone’s house. The reason that millions of people are suffering is a combination of Wall Street greed and incredible economic mismanagement.

Even as a consensus is emerging among economists that the United States should put job growth ahead of deficit cuts, a new study focused on New England finds that the region no longer can afford to spend scarce resources on tax credits and other business giveaways. Instead, it needs to channel economic development efforts to rebuilding neglected infrastructure and improving education for people at all levels. “Prioritizing Approaches to Economic Development in New England” provides

ample evidence that infrastructure (roads, bridges, dams, energy transmission systems, drinking water, and the like) and education are effective approaches for creating jobs and generating economic growth.

The study, by the Political Economy Research Institute at the University of Massachusetts-Amherst, finds the New England states have too long viewed funding for public services and economic development as competing interests—and that’s a false dichotomy. Sounds like the study can apply to the rest of the country as well.

Demonizing the public sector harms the U.S. middle class, writes Drum Major Institute for Public Policy (DMI) Research Director Amy Traub, who reminds us how fundamental the jobs they do are to our everyday lives:

It’s easy to lose sight of the other ways that a strong public sector supports our economy. Middle-class Americans and the businesses they work for rely on good schools, clean and safe streets, and high quality public services and infrastructure. In so doing, they depend on the dedicated teachers, police, firefighters, librarians, sanitation workers, parks employees, and support staff that keep states and cities running.

States and cities face very real fiscal challenges, but the cause is falling tax revenue due to the deepest recession in decades—not excessive spending or lavish compensation for public workers.

Further, Traub has a recommendation for Congress, some Democrats included:

Trashing our middle class in an effort to cut costs is short sighted. Downgrading the middle-class pay and benefits of public workers only speeds their erosion in the private sector, undermining everyone who works for a living….Rather than attacking public pensions that afford retirees a middle-class standard of living, [lawmakers] should be thinking about how to increase retirement security for millions of private-sector employees with meager savings.

As Progressive States Network points out, extremist anti-worker organizations like the American Legislative Exchange Council have been trying to gut public employee pensions for years—and they are using the recession as a public relations platform.

There is no crisis in most state retirement systems, even according to the numbers of the researchers demanding state leaders take unneeded action to cut the incomes of retirees.  And despite the hype from a few carefully selected anecdotes of retirees gaming pension systems, the reality is that the overwhelming number of public employees receive pretty bare-bones benefits, in some cases not enough even to keep them out of poverty.

Corporate backed anti-worker groups are the winners when the public taps into public-employee blame game. Wall Street is another big winner. The CEOs of Big Banks and the financial industry are happy to see the finger pointed at public employees. It means America’s workers are fighting each other and not united in targeting the real culprit of our economic misfortunes.

This article was originally posted on AFL-CIO NOW Blog.

About the Author: Tula Connell got her first union card while she worked her way through college as a banquet bartender for the Pfister Hotel in Milwaukee (they were represented by a hotel and restaurant local union—the names of the national unions were different then than they are now). With a background in journalism—covering bull roping in Texas and school boards in Virginia—she started working in the labor movement in 1991. Beginning as a writer for SEIU (and OPEIU member), she now blogs under the title of AFL-CIO managing editor.

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4 Responses to “Target Wall Street Greed, Not Public Employees”

  1. Charles Read Says:

    Tula:

    I got my first union card (Communications Workers of America)at 16 while working for the real AT&T some 45 years ago. My second after service in the Maries with the Oil Chemical and Atomic Workers of America.

    Public Pensions are out of control. See the California Goveners comments on the million dollar plus public pension accounts. Look at the pensions for our Congressmen, that is a disgrace. Many of the private union pensdion funds have been looted (See Teamsters) and will have to be bailed out by the pension guareentee fund that is taxpayer funded.

    I know you work for the union and therefor must toe the line. But your experience shows me you know what is really like to work for a living.

    I wish you luck in finding a job that doesn’t depend on people being forced to contribute to something they don’t believe in. I guess that is why the Unions and the Government get along so well. They both collect their revenue from a population that really does not want to pay but has too.

    Charles

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  4. Made in the USA Says:

    The topic of Tula’s blog is PUBLIC employee pensions. Unlike in the private sector, where you were a union member in a closed shop, public employees can not be forced to join a union. That’s actually illegal.

    In reality, what we see in the public sector are “free riders”: non union members who enjoy the benefits that the dues paying members earn for everybody. Basically they are what many people would call “welfare queens”, just like the corporations that get taxpayer subsidies, tax breaks, and other public monies. So in other words, your rant isn’t really even related to Tula’s concerns.

    Sounds to me like you have some issues about having been “forced” to join a union, even though you don’t seem to regret getting the good pay, health plan, and pension benefit for your retirement that your union got for you. Seems a little overly selfish, don’t you think? Especially since nobody forced you to work for those companies in the first place.

    Turn off the Glenn Beck and stop with the whining, ok buddy? You should be thanking unions for what you have, not bashing them and selling out the American middle class.

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