Some 300 union members gathered Wednesday outside the Capitol to show solidarity for Wisconsin's embattled public-sector workers--but relatively few Connecticut state employees turned out.
And while the crowd, composed largely of private-sector labor and unionized school teachers and other municipal employees, roared its approval for Gov. Dannel P. Malloy, state union leaders said that was not an endorsement of the $1 billion in worker concessions Malloy is seeking.
"There is no reason for a full assault on the right to organize, the right to negotiate, the right to arbitrate," Malloy said, referring to Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker's call to repeal collective bargaining for all issues except compensation. Walker's proposals, which also include increased pension and health care costs for public-sector workers, prompted thousands of angry employees to demonstrate in the Wisconsin Capitol last week.
While workers in that state were protesting last week, Malloy issued his own call for $1 billion per year in concessions from Connecticut state employees--more than five times the value of wage and health care givebacks workers agreed to in 2009.
Despite Malloy's proposal, the mood Wednesday between the Connecticut governor and the crowd was relatively cordial.
"We may not always agree, you and I... but we can still sit down around a table," Malloy added. "We can negotiate agreement. We can ask for compromise. We can work together."
John W. Olsen, president of the Connecticut AFL-CIO, introduced Malloy to kick off the one-hour rally by acknowledging Malloy has a "tough job," but quickly adding that Connecticut's governor "believes in negotiations and believes in unions."
Olsen and other union leaders acknowledged afterward that while all unions were invited to participate, state workers composed a relatively small segment of the overall crowd.
But Olsen, who accused Malloy last week of recommending excessive concessions from workers while not seeking enough in new taxes on the wealthy, said Wednesday's event wasn't about that disagreement.
"I think what's important here is that we reached out, showed our solidarity, and showed the problem is not about public employees," Olsen said.
When asked if the crowd's warm response for Malloy was an endorsement of the governor's proposed concessions, Olsen responded, "No, no, no, no. We endorse bargaining."
Two state correction officers who did attend the rally, C.J. Sullivan and Neil Liskey of Local 1565 of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, said they believe Malloy will hear disapproval from state workers--when the time is right--if he continues to seek concessions at that level.
"I don't think the round of applause today had anything to do with the $1 billion," Sullivan said. "We're here to support collective bargaining today and we're fortunate to have a governor who wants to work with us, but a lot of people we work with are not happy."
There was plenty of agreement at Wednesday's rally about the participants' opposition to Walker's proposals as workers chanted "we are one, we are one." There were signs that read: "Scott Walker is a Communist Spy," and "Wall Street Greed Caused This Problem, Not Your Child's Teacher."
"The gulf between the rich and the poor in this country grows wider every single day. It is not what America is about," said Senate President Pro Tem Donald E. Williams Jr., D-Brooklyn, one of several state legislators to address the crowd.
Public-sector workers "didn't cause this mess. They didn't serve the bad loans," Connecticut Education Association Director John Yrchik said, adding that the federal investment deregulation statutes that helped create the last financial crisis also helped line the perpetrators' pockets. "I can tell you this wealth didn't go to government employees."
I love this "we didn't cause this mess" attitude. Well, I sure as hell didn't either, but I'm stuck with the ramifications, so buck up.
The self defeating attitude of America's middle class will continue to push us in a deeper economic hole if too many people buck up instead of act up.
Union members fought to build the middle class - and bring about wages and benefits that rewarded hard work and productivity. They wrestled for decent wages, the 40 hour week, vacations, health benefits, pensions and even the weekend - from the tight fists of business. Go ahead and blame union members for not keeping the vigil in the last couple decades - and not reacting as angrily as we
I have to laugh when people compare the hard working private sector machinsts of the 60's in Conn- who had to negotiate with the threat of moving the whole place to Alabama- and produce a product people would buy at a cost they would pay, to public sector unions who negotiate with the same peoples whose elections they funded. In my town, the board of ed are parents who need the teachers to teach their kids and make recommendations-and can get their neigbors to pay the bills. The state budget is largely funded by lower fairfield county, many
Read More"Self-defeating"....get off your high horse Leo. The point is I'm tired of footing the bill for a bunch of do-nothing public-sector employees who give me no return on my forced investment.
The private sectors unions of the 40 50 and 60 helped workers negotiate a share of the profit, which they helped, create. Private sector unions do not have that history. AFL CIO, SEIU and the others "negotiate” with politicians for MORE TAX DOLLARS. That puts the interest of the union against the interest of the public.Public Sector unions are bad for the people.
The public has a right to expect the effective and efficient delivery of public services. Unhappily, the evidence is overwhelming that government management in a power-sharing relationship with trade unions cannot deliver on quality or efficiency. Consider that only half the students in Connecticut's high-priced public schools are on track for a legitimate high school diploma.
I don't begrudge anyone their pay when it's for a job well done, but c'mon... the unions and the politicians they control have turned the public sector into a huge, unaccountable, dispirited, feather-bedded ripoff.
In the early 90s, we experienced a burst of imagination
Read MoreFor some reason, government workers think the job of everyone else in the economy is to protect their high salaries, crazy work rules and obscene pensions. They self-righteously lecture us about public service, the children, a "living wage" — all in the service of squeezing more money from the taxpayer to fund their breathtakingly selfish job arrangements.
When a private company is in financial trouble, what is the first thing they do? They make an effort to bring costs under control - especially in personnel. What is wrong with the public sector doing that? Some of these union workers are acting as if there is no budget crisis. It's getting harder and harder for those of us who respect our teachers and public workers, to understand where they are coming from with these temper tantrums.