Trust me,I work For the Government
State Employees offer to pitch in and save money
Friday, November 21 2008
State Employees representing the Executive Branch bargaining units with over 9000 employees came to bargaining today with an offer to help with the budget crisis. State employees who have gone without raises for two years in recent contracts, and consistently accepted raises lower than inflation, today offered to help balance the budget by identifying savings and waste in State government.
State employee’s raises have not kept up with inflation for the last ten years consistently leaving them behind the private sector in real income today called for everyone to pitch in.
The State employees represented by the MSEA-SEIU manage lifesaving services for children and adults through DHHS, DOT, and Public Safety. All branches of State government provide necessary services to the people of Maine and State employees stand ready to help save tax payer dollars by ending wasteful outsourcing and bloated contracts to out of state companies.
“Why send our money out of State, when we can hire Mainers to do the work for less?” said one of the Union negotiators, No one knows how to serve Mainers better than Mainers and we will work with the State to identify areas where money can be saved and funds kept in Maine. When we keep the money in Maine it helps our revenue fo ALL Maine citizens!
'We provide quality services." We want to help cut the tax burden said members of the negotiations team.
Many people don't know that some state employees earn so little that they qualify for state services. Even these employees are dedicated to doing their part to get everyone in Maine through these hard times.
There are so many examples of waste and opportunities for savings said another member of the executive branch teams.
We can find ways to save tax dollars.
“State employees pay taxes too and see their neighbors and friends hurting. With the help of their Union State employees have been trying to point out the waste of outsourcing for years and maybe during this crisis the time has come for the legislature to listen to those who know the work best.
State employees are your friends and neighbors and they don't want agencies to close and the public suffer. Mainers will still need to register a car, adopt a child, be sure their food is safe, and educate their children.
State workers know how fragile the economy is at the moment but they know Maine will weather this downturn better than many States because Mainers will pull together.
Saving State services has strikes home when it is made personal. Here is a personal story.
Recently two public safety workers working long hours and many unpaid hours on their own time were responsible for tracking down a sexual predator. The detective work rivaled the best of CSI. These two heroes don't make Hollywood salaries, they don't get a bonus for catching a monster. They did it to keep your children safe.
No one knows how many children may have been saved from this monster. Last week one of these heroes was told they were scheduled for layoff, after saving children their child would have a mother with no job.
I hope the State will work with its citizens to lower costs and I expect the public would question why State agencies would refuse to partner with State employees at no cost in a mutual goal of saving tax dollars.
The State is expecting as much as a half billion dollar deficit and our members want to be part of the solution, we have the skills and the people to replace contracted services, saving both jobs and money for the taxpayers of Maine while improving services.
The workers' contract does not expire until July 2009 but they are in negotiations now in order help find savings in the coming biennial budget.
State employees know they find ways to save the State millions of dollars. They are willing to commit the resources to make this happen.
Update: Saturday November 22
Ground Breaking Meeting of Executive, Judicial, and Community College bargaining units.
In a show of solidarity and strength the three bargaining units that are most closely associated with the biennial budget process met on Saturday to share their concerns, their talents, and to build solidarity.
The theme developed was "The best for the largest number, regardless of bargaining unit". This unprecedented meeting will lead to more sharing in the future and make it harder to pit one unit against another.
"We all share common interests and we all want to help each other" said one of the Union team members.
On the surface, overseas outsourcing—with live human operators—might appear to be a good means to save operational costs. However, research shows that the American consumer sees those that outsourced customer services as providing less satisfaction and lower resolution levels.
Customers are willing to use automated systems for a number of reasons, such as the convenience of ATMs that are convenient, fast and under customer is in control.
Technology will win out in the end because
• It is available 24 x 7.
• It can answer questions without a language barrier.
•Customers can do it for themselves
• Technology is the perfect answer to “I want it NOW”
• Consistent answers every time.
The warm bodies on phones aren’t going away but as technology changes faster than the number of trained support staff the opportunities to implement technology to reduce costs and increase revenue will continue to grow.
Cost savings, efficiency, no internal human relations issues, there are a number of reasons to outsource or automate consumer contact centers or help desks. Outsourcing and technology have a proven record of delivering benefits. There are several factors companies should consider before outsourcing vital customer service applications. First the quality of the service should be given priority over cost effectiveness if you want to have long term stability and growth.
Consumers know that support calls are likely to be answered Dallas to India or Viet Nam. For the most customers this has not been a problem but a growing concern is whether their questions are answered quickly, competently, and courteously.
“A sampling of consumer complaints about outsourcing contains comments such as “The worst customer experience I ever had was placing a support desk call that terminated in India for a product purchased in the U.S.”
“If you expect to provide customer satisfaction by providing outsourced help, your long-term success is at risk”
“Outsourced customer service is cost effective for some, but at what cost to the consumer?”
Providing support by outsourcing allows companies immediate savings through virtual operations that need no physical space. They don’t hire, train, or retain employees. Staff can be used and dropped at a moments notice to handle call volumes. On the other hand they lose skilled help every time they reduce call volume, they build no employee loyalty or long term product knowledge.
Outsourcing saves money, but only to the short term bottom end. The customer gets excessive wait times, lowered quality, and on many calls the issue doesn't get resolved in a single session. An American customer reaching many call centers feels disrespected and unvalued. Ultimately, outsourcing removes consumer loyalty and trust.
In my opinion, one of the worst examples of not respecting the consumer is a famous maker of scanning software, also a maker of IVR software. They are in favor of automated response systems. You need to check some of the software they sell in the U.S... No tech support whatsoever with the exception of one free call for installation issue. No bug reporting unless you pay them. The only support a regular user of their software gets is an online forum with FAQs, which was off line for months at a time.
Pension Funding
Will this be the next bailout?
Exxon Mobil after posting successive record setting profits and receiving Billions in tax breaks has the most underfunded plan of any company in the S&P 500.
Respect for employees? I don’t think so. Big Oil Has A Hole in Pension Funding
While Republicans are still trying to say the free market will solve everything and prosperity will be trickled down, the employees are in the bottom story of the two story outhouse.
While very few corporate pension funds have weathered the economic problems and State Employee and teachers pension funds have been hard hit, plans at energy companies are in the worst shape..
According to an analysis of S&P 500 companies from Citi Investment Research, companies in the energy sector had pension funds that were only slightly more than 80 percent funded at the beginning of 2008, the lowest funding level among any of the 10 industries examined by Citi.
With the drop in the market and the drops in oil prices by the end of October, Citi calculates that funding levels have dropped off another 20 percent, at least, leaving energy company pension funds barely above 60% funded.
“This could result in a need for energy firms to meaningfully contribute to their plans in 2009,” wrote Citi analyst Tobias Levkovich in a report released Thursday, November 6.
Why does it sound like this analyst thinks it is bad that these companies will have to fund their pension funds? Is it because the obscene profits have not been enough and the companies have been short changing their employees to benefit their investors?
“This would come at a time when earnings revisions for energy companies already are sliding sharply alongside plummeting oil prices … and could add another headwind for energy earnings and stock prices.”
The report noted that a substantial chunk of the funding shortfall in the energy industry belonged to just a handful of companies. That included Exxon Mobil, ConocoPhillips and Chevron, which have been reporting huge profits but still had three of the 10 most underfunded pension plans in the S&P 500 at the beginning of this year.
Indeed, Exxon Mobil had the most underfunded plan of any company in the S&P 500. Exxon Mobil has $27.8 billion in pension plan assets to cover $34.5 billion in pension liabilities, for a $6.7 billion deficit. ConocoPhillips, with a $1.6 billion shortfall, had the fifth-most underfunded plan, while Chevron’s $1.2 billion pension deficit was the eighth-largest of any company in the S&P 500.
The election results mean Democrats won....big.
The margins of victory were great but they weren't absolutely overwhelming, overwhelming would have been 65 Senate seats, but they were great.
Simply winning formerly blue states and some new red states does not tell the whole story. Obama beat John McCain with a margin similar to Bill Clinton's defeat of George Bush in 1992, but more importantly Obama picked up formerly red states and significantly increased the Clinton win margin in many blue states.
Although we didn’t get 60 in the Senate and Obama didn't win by 13 points as some early polls suggested the Democratic gains in the Senate and House are so commanding that many in Congress could be tempted to ignore Republicans or look for payback for the next four year.
The G.O.P ignored Democrats and that was a big piece of the Democratic victory this year. Being ignored makes people angry, and being ignored blinds the other side to your strength. We must not ignore the G.O.P. Starting now we must not be tempted to fall into the Bush doctrine of ignoring the other side and not having a clue how they are preparing to make a comeback.
The G.O.P. is already using a favorite tool, the big lie, the first claim is that the country is actually center right, and Rush Limbaugh is calling the economic problems the "Obama recession". In Republican eyes and on talk radio, the economy was great until Obama won the election. This is the tale they will try to spin over the next four years. The economy only got worse because the country fears the Obama win.
Suffering denial, the G.O.P. does not yet see there has been a massive swing in voters' willingness to support ideas condemned by the right for years. Stem cell research, an end to an illegal war, and a return to government by the constitution, not by the Vice President. This was a great Democratic year, the election proved our country is not a center-right country, the focus has changed. So much for the good news.
The Republican Party can not be ignored, they got 45% of the vote and the Democratic party can not afford to make dedicated enemies of nearly half of the population. Every one of the remaining red Congressional seats represents voters that we need to reach out to by not being unwilling to listen.
Right Mr. Bush, Mr. McCain?
If we don't watch the right we give them a wedge for a comeback. Our new Senators and Representatives with our new President must keep their promises. Rahm Emanuel when asked what Obama was really going to do now that he won answered "exactly what he said he would do, and in the same priority as he promised". This gives hope that many of the anti-Bush voters that voted for Obama will become true Democrats if we keep our promises.
Obama knows the right will continue to paint him as aloof, an intellectual, not "Main st."
Obama hasn't stopped showing America who he is. Obama said to his daughters "you have earned the new puppy that's coming with us to the new White House" and when asked about what breed of dog he might get, he said “mabe a shelter dog”, and that many shelter dogs are "mutts like me". In these two statements he showed a warm and human side of himself in the same mold as Franklin Roosevelt, THE depression era President, (with Scottish terrier Fala), Ronald Reagan (with a spaniel named Rex), and hopefully unlike Richard Nixon with Checkers.
In only a few sentences he bonded with dog lovers all over the country, he shared an experience remembered by millions wondering what dog to bring home.. He showed his love and his concern for his children, and unlike compassionate conservatism, he showed real concern by wanting to find a shelter dog.
Good start, Obama is showing he is smart, funny, and compassionate. I can almost see the first "1/20/2013 We can Again!" stickers. Great start but it will get tougher if we underestimate the right. Keeping an eye on the G.O.P picks for leadership will be critical, who the G.O.P. puts up for leadership, if they move to the center, if the Limbaugh, Hannity influence falls off then we may face a new and energized Grand Old Party. The easiest way for the Republicans to make a comeback is also the farthest from possible. They would have to say they had been wrong and were returning to their roots, Bush was wrong, interfering in the Schiavo case was wrong, and a false war was wrong. If they did that, they could come back. Then again, if they did that they would be Democrats.
Their selection of leaders will tell us if they are going to continue to be mindlessly right wing trying to be even more conservative or if they will try to co-opt Democratic successes and claim victory.
Obama's choice of Rahm Emanuel shows that he will be can see the future and that he will be the architecht of legislative strategy that acknowledges political reality while not being willing to bow to an out of control Congress that could lose if the budget is allowed to become a piƱata in the Republican tradition.
Obama's appointment of Emanuel tells me that Obama is in control and intends to remain at the helm.
Obama will not allow Republicans to blame him for a recession he has inherited, but we can not add to the problems by passing giveaways to every state that elected a Democrat. We can not afford to use the next four years to build a Congress to nowhere.
Obama will be a powerful force for our country's new alignment with the left, but conservatives won't go away. They may just learn how to hide their deregulation, tax cuts for the rich agenda better than they did this election. They hid their intent for at least six years. I hope that rather than change they spend four years trying to put lipstick on a pit bull.
Can Labor make gains during Obama's presidency?
The Republicans are acting shocked and Accusing President Elect Obama of intending to keep his promises and pass pro labor laws and return the NLRB to the National Labor Relations Board and to stop allowing the department to be a tool to deny worker rights. Those on the right are acting as if "everyone knew" that promises made to organized labor could be safely ignored after the election. The sickening thing is that I truly believe that they thought Obama and they were on the same page about forgetting promises to the public.
Labor has been under attack by successive Republican presidents and congresses for decades. Anti-Union Pundits cite the lowered Union membership as proof that America does not want Unions while the right has put up more and more barriers to forming Unions.
This could be the largest change for labor since Franklin D. Roosevelt became president in 1933 during the great depression.
Under successive conservative administrations during the last thirty years, union enrollment continued to drop. President Ronald Reagan's anti-union bias was shown when he disregarded public safety and fired air traffic controllers during a strike.
Can labor make a comeback?
Union members voted in such large numbers for Barack Obama and provided larger majorities in both the house and the Senate that they may feel rightfully that the administration owes them some support.
The first bill on the agenda will even the playing field for employees seeking to form a Union, the Employee Free Choice Act will make it easier for employees to form Unions while avoiding harrassment and illegal firings.
No longer will only Unions face fines for their campaign tactics, employers will face substantial penalties for firing or harassing workers for wanting a Union to represent them.
The economy is a wreck because workers need d higher wages to afford increase food, fuel, and living expenses. Henry Ford made sure his employees could buy a Ford, a lesson lost in the greed and selfishness of the rush to deregulate.
Bureau of Labor Statistics reports show the number of workers belonging Unions in 2007 at 12.1 percent, nearly a forty percent drop since 1983.
During thirty years the only time "Republicans have been the the party of smaller government is when they have deregulated protections for workers or small investors. If more regulations could choke labor they are all for new laws.
Now, as in the Great Depression the central problem is the lack of consumer spending.
The mortgage crisis was not completely the fault of a bubble. People got mortgages on the premise that in the future they could make more money, and be better able to pay their mortgage.But that never happened, unlike any other time in US history when profits rose incomes didn't ncrease. When adjusted for inflation incomes actually fell.
When Roosevelt was elected he introduced labor friendly laws, allowing workers to negotiate for better wages and job security. When wages rose, the US entered the longest period of prosperity in our countries history.
Unions this year led what may have been the most active and organized campaign ever seen. Unions don’t want payback.
It is not payback if our new President and Democratic majority pass labor friendly laws, they will only be keeping the promises made to and supported by a majority of the electorate.
It will be a refreshing change if Washington starts keeping promises to the people rather than the richest one percent.
Caps Wages. Caps salaries, in part to reduce the incentive of C.E.O.s to speculate wildly with investors’ funds.
Busts Trusts. Breaks up financial conglomerates and reinstate the 1933 Glass-Steagall Act keeping investment banks and commercial banks separate, in order to reduce speculation.
Taxes Speculation. Spearheads an international 1 percent tax on financial transactions, to slow speculation and reduce market volatility.
Stabilizes Mortgages. Keeps Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, which were formed to boost home ownership, under government management, and imposes a moratorium on foreclosures.
Invests in Housing. Reinvests in public housing and renews rent control, until the “ownership society” becomes real.
Prices for True Cost. Establishes a “true cost” pricing system to ensure that prices reflect the true cost to society of products, services, and practices.
Taxes Inheritance. Establishes a 100 percent tax on inheritance for fortunes over $500,000. These revenues will enable a quicker implementation of universal health care, affordable housing, guaranteed college education, and other measures considered standard in almost every other developed country.
Sets Emergency Tax. Provides for an emergency surtax on the wealthy in case of future financial meltdowns, to further discourage the sort of reckless speculation that fueled the latest banking crisis.
Limits Derivatives. Regulates and streamlines the market in abstract financial instruments, especially those derivatives and derivatives of derivatives which serve no social purpose whatsoever.
You know what it is like when you are driving towards a busy intersection and you can hear sirens? Something big and fast is heading your way and you need to know what is coming in order not to get smashed out of the road.
I am not going to comment on these stories. These snippets are the result of putting three words into a Google search, SEIU, furlough, and 2008. Take a look and make up your own mind if they mean anything.
fur·lough
1.
a. A leave of absence or vacation, especially one granted to a member of the armed forces.
b. A usually temporary layoff from work.
c. A leave of absence from prison granted to a prisoner.
2. The papers or documents authorizing a leave: The soldiers had their furloughs in their breast pockets.
tr.v. fur·loughed, fur·lough·ing, fur·loughs
1. To grant a leave to.
2. To lay off (workers).
SEIU Local 721 represents 85,000 public service workers across Southern California including county, city and non-profit employees.
“check out the latest Civil Service Commission Agenda(available at lacity.org) it looks like the civil service ruleto permit "mandatory furlough/temporary layoffs" is back again.
“the Coalition of City Unions made a deal to give back $18.25 million to the generalfund (that was savings from the various health plans, which ispart of the contracts with the health plans), and to pursue aprogram of $3 million in voluntary furlough days. that means!
On Thursday, November 6, state workers received a letter from Gov. Schwarzenegger outlining his plans to cut state services, increase sales taxes, impose a one day per month furlough on all state workers, and take away two paid holidays.
Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger will propose one-day-a-month unpaid furloughs for state workers for the next 17 months, as well as rescinding two of the workers' 13 paid holidays.
DA offices in Georgia to have furloughs
District attorney Offices across the state will take across the board furloughs, starting this month.
State-employees of district attorney offices and the Prosecuting Attorney’s Council staff will be given one unpaid day off per month.
MarylandState employees are waiting for a decision on mandatory leave without pay.It was one of recommendation to fill the $432 million budget deficit. .In 1991 state workers demonstrated were furloughed by Governor William Schaefer.The state may save $48 million by enforcing six days unpaid leave on State employees. And way back in 2006
Rhode Island 2006
GOVERNOR SIGNS ORDER CREATING FURLOUGH DAYS FOR
STATE EMPLOYEES
Three additional furlough days for Fiscal Year 2008 are being planned.
Governor Carcieri said. “While I understand that this decision is not a popular one with many state employees, these furlough days are an alternative to deeper personnel cuts,”
To select the furlough days the Department of Administration determined the days traditionally taken off by employees. Those are days that typically precede or follow holidays or holiday weekends.The Fair Labor Standards Act requires that furlough days be enforced and no employee is allowed to work on the day of the furlough.
Enter your EmailPreview Powered by FeedBlitz