About 85 city and school district employees gathered outside
City Hall on Wednesday afternoon, many with signs bearing
messages such as, "Lay off Dave Bing," "We demand a decent
contract" and "Save Detroit." (Photo by HB Meeks/Tell Us
Detroit)
Unions
ramp up
protests
against
city,
schools
By
COREY
WILLIAMS
Associated
Press
Writer
City
workers
and the
mayor's
office
are
approaching
a
weekend
deadline
on
possible
cuts to
hundreds
of jobs
if
unions
don't
agree to
wage
cuts and
other
concessions
aimed at
saving
cash-starved
Detroit
from
further
fiscal
misery.
The
7,700-member
Detroit
Federation
of
Teachers
also is
negotiating
a new
contract
with the
city's
troubled
public
school
district,
which is
looking
for ways
to save
money.
Their
respective
battles
come as
Mayor
Dave
Bing
tries to
wipe out
a $300
million
deficit
and
schools'
emergency
financial
manager
Robert
Bobb
restructures
the
district
while
working
to fill
a $259
million
budget
hole.
About 85
city and
school
district
employees
gathered
outside
City
Hall on
Wednesday
afternoon,
many
with
signs
bearing
messages
such as,
"Lay off
Dave
Bing,"
"We
demand a
decent
contract"
and
"Save
Detroit."
Larry
Carson,
53, a
15-year
veteran
of the
city's
water
department,
held a
sign
that
read,
"Keep
City
Jobs!"
Carson
said
he's
most
concerned
about
jobs
being
privatized
and
workers
not
being
replaced
after
they
leave or
retire.
"Go to
any
plant in
the
water
department.
We are
understaffed,"
Carson
said.
"If you
keep
this up,
somebody's
going to
get
hurt."
"The
budget
situation
is
unusually
bad
right
now, and
not
losing
ground
may be
hard,"
Albion
College
professor
and
University
of
Michigan
labor
researcher
Greg
Saltzman
said.
"Unions
are
going to
fight
much
harder
to keep
things
they
already
have
than to
get new
things
they
never
had
before."
Bing was
elected
in a May
5 runoff
and
already
has laid
off
about
300
workers.
He has
said
another
1,000
could
lose
their
jobs
Saturday
unless
bargaining
units
agree to
10
percent
wage
cuts in
unpaid
furlough
days and
other
contract
concessions.
Detroit
has
about
13,000
employees.
Ten
labor
unions
have
endorsed
his
opponent,
Tom
Barrow,
in the
upcoming
Nov. 3
general
election.
The
American
Federation
of
State,
County
and
Municipal
Employees,
which
represents
90,000
workers
throughout
Michigan,
shifted
its
support
from
Bing to
Barrow.
AFSCME
Local
207 in
Detroit
has been
a prime
mover
behind
the
anti-Bing
demonstrations.
"We
confronted
them in
negotiations
that if
the
unions
take the
concessions
will the
layoffs
go away,
and they
said
'no,'"
said
John
Riehl,
president
of the
1,000-member
local.
"We want
to let
the
public
know
about
the
cutbacks
and
damage
to the
city,
and how
angry
and
upset we
are with
this
mayor."
Several
smaller
groups
among
the
city's
50
bargaining
units
already
have
agreed
to
concessions,
mayoral
spokesman
Ed
Cardenas
said.
"We can
always
pull
back the
number
of
layoffs
going
into
effect,"
he said.
Just
over
1,000
Detroit
teachers
and
staff
have
been
laid off
since
Bobb was
appointed
in March
by Gov.
Jennifer
Granholm
to clean
up the
district's
finances.
About
590 have
been
called
back to
work.
Another
400 have
retired.
Contract
negotiations
are
moving
along,
but
"folks
are
definitely
pushing
back,"
teachers'
union
President
Keith
Johnson
said.
"They're
also
being
asked to
work
longer
days and
a longer
school
year,
yet be
paid
less.
That's
not
going to
happen,"
he said.
"People
still
have to
provide
for
their
families.
Those
who make
the
least
are
asked to
give the
most."