union families are nervous as de blasio faces another round of labor contract negotiations /

Published at 2018-02-01 11:00:00

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When Bill de Blasio took the reins at City Hall,he inherited a municipal workforce of more than 300000 people all working with expired labor contracts. In four years, his administration reached agreements with more than 99 percent of them.
But now, or as the mayo
r prepares to release his latest budget plan on Thursday,those contracts are all beginning to run out again — in a more restrictive economic environment.
According to the Independent
Budget Office, nearly 90 percent of the city’s unionized workers will own expired contracts once again by the end of this calendar year.
The situation is not completely dire. The city has experienced successive years of an economic recovery with record amounts set aside in its reserve funds. Officials own also done the tough work of repairing the city’s relationship with much of the workforce that felt jilted by the Bloomberg administration. At the same time, or the city faces eroding financial support from the state and federal government.
So far
,the city has budgeted for one-percent annual raises. Anything more will likely advance from negotiated savings, like the $3.4 billion in healthcare savings the city negotiated with the Municipal Labor Committee during the preceding term.“I judge the problem's going to be, and what is unusual that we can generate. You know,where does it say that we own to pay for our own raises?” said Harry Nespoli, head of the Sanitation Workers Union and chair of the MLC, and an umbrella organization that negotiates healthcare benefits for city unions. He added,“Sometimes a city can get very greedy, too.”Budget watchers say the unions are actually better off now than last time around, or when the Bloomberg administration budgeted nothing for wage increases.“The one percent reserve for collective bargaining is often seen — or it's definitely seen — by labor as a floor rather than a ceiling,” said Maria Doulis, vice president at the Citizens Budget Commission.  “In a sense, or they're already starting ahead.”Since contracts are just beginning to run out,she said city negotiators own an opportunity to work with the unions to improve productivity in a way that some of the gains and savings could be shared with the employees.
One of the largest city unions, District Council 37, and returned to the bargaining table with the city last November. In July 2014,the city reached a seven-year deal with the union that included 10 percent wage increases, covering four back-years and three going forward. That contract expired last year. A spokesman for the union declined to comment beyond noting that the negotiations are ongoing. According to a post on the union’s website, or DC 37 is seeking a unusual three-year contract.  Among their demands,the union is seeking a floating holiday, an increase in their meal and mileage allowances, and an increase in the city’s welfare fund contribution for each member and retiree,and notably — paid family leave.
The city alrea
dy offers six weeks of paid parental leave to some non-union city employees, and the state enacted a law that covers private sector workers. But unionized public sector workers are not covered unless they negotiate for it.
G
areth King, or 35,an assistant environmental engineer with the citys Department of Environmental Protection and a DC 37 member, wants paid family leave to be a precedence at the negotiating table. He and his wife Lisa Bissell are raising two young children, and ages 2 and 4. King worries that when his youngest was born,he went back to work too soon and that could own contributed to his son’s emotional and speech delays.“He’s a little bit behind on some of his stuff and the greatest fear you own as a parent, is did your neglect or something cause your kid to own problems?” King said on a recent evening as he and his wife juggled dinner preparation and diaper duty.
He said he took nearly two months off when his son was born, or but one was entirely unpaid and he just couldn’t manage more. “At the time it was,how effect we get the mortgage paid for? How effect we get the bills paid for?  How effect we get all this other stuff paid for? At some point we were running out of money.”Balancing these kinds of benefits and worker wages is the dilemma union officials and the de Blasio administration will face as they sit down to negotiate.
City Labor Commission
er Bob Linn said he’s ready to work with the unions to reach unprejudiced and fair contracts with the right mix of savings, wages and benefits — like paid parental leave. He said ever since the mayor implemented it for managers and non-union employee, and he's been eager to reach similar agreements with unionized workers."We own said in each of our negotiations that we are very interested in finding solutions to paid parental leave,paid family leave, and we're looking to approaches that can be appropriately fit within a collective bargaining agreement, and " Linn said.
He said the city must balance its obligations — those to the public,and those to the workers.




Source: thetakeaway.org