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unclerico wrote: » These people all get paid with our tax dollars so I think we should have a say in what they can and can't do. Oh and the thinking that this outcome will all of the sudden make companies take away your vacations is ridiculous. This has been a long time coming and I can't wait for it to go through. Fiscal sanity will be restored!
unclerico wrote: » Im not one to be politically correct or very diplomatic so I'll just go ahead and say it: bust the unions and make them work like the rest of us. You people claim its the republicans that are schills for big business when in fact it is the opposite. There are plenty of large orgs that donate heavily to the dems. The reason that government workers should have no collective bargaining rights is because government is a monopoly. You, as a citizen, have no choice where to get your services from in your state. The trash that is public education in this country is a direct consequence of unionization. These people have no worries about getting fired for any reason short of killing a student. You've got teachers forcing their students to make signs to carry in a protest that they know nothing about and calling it a history lesson. On to pay and other compensation; the average public sector worker makes 50% more than the private sector guy doing the same job. Okay maybe not the same job because the private sector guy will do things out of his job description without fear of making the other guy look bad. These people all get paid with our tax dollars so I think we should have a say in what they can and can't do. Oh and the thinking that this outcome will all of the sudden make companies take away your vacations is ridiculous. This has been a long time coming and I can't wait for it to go through. Fiscal sanity will be restored!
eMeS wrote: » Actually this makes me want to buy you a beer even more....I'll bet you have some interesting stories to tell... MS
unclerico wrote: » The reason that government workers should have no collective bargaining rights is because government is a monopoly. You, as a citizen, have no choice where to get your services from in your state.
eMeS wrote: » I really don't get this. The Wis. governor claims that getting rid of collective bargaining is a budgetary issue, but so far has provided no evidence that eliminating collective bargaining addresses their budget deficit.
SteveLord wrote: » He isn't trying to get rid of it completely. They could still use it for wages. But they would need to pay more toward their pensions and health insurance. And police/firefighters/state patrol would be exempt.
eansdad wrote: » Sorry to burst your bubble but I get paid $15k less a year then I would in the private sector and I lost $10k/yr comming from a job with EDS. For my job discription of computer tech I have to pretty much manage 700 PCs, 50 switches, 3 servers, 120 staff and 1300 students. We recieve low pay, crappy health insurance, sure we get paid days (sick/vac/personal) but try to use them and you can be given an unpaid day or two off for abuse or fired. On top of this we get 0 training. I am going to college on my dime and taking certs on my dime. The only thing keeping me here is the fact that I have 7 yrs in (at 10 years I can take an early retirement and earn a huge sum of $400/mo) and I live 5 mins away. My wife who also woks here makes less then $20k/yr dealing with autistic elementry school kids as an aide and regularly has 2-3 of these kids at a time. She comes home with bites, bruises and scratchs and once had her arm pulled so hard that she lost feeling in it for a few days. But yeah I guess we have it great, we have non-civil service people hating us because they think we make the money that those people in the paper make and will have this huge pension when we retire. We have it great don't we.
SteveLord wrote: » And police/firefighters/state patrol would be exempt.
Megadeth4168 wrote: » Like you, I stay where I'm at because I have 2 years left and I can be vested with a pension. Moreover, my benefits are enough right now to make my position a bit more competitive but I could still make more in the private sector even without my benefits.
Megadeth4168 wrote: » Good post! I think there is a lot of misinformation about public sector employees. Certainly there are cases where there are overpaid/overcompensated public employees and certainly there are the stereotypical lazy public sector employees. To add my own perspective to this, I am a network administrator for a municipality and have been with the organization for over 10 years. I support 150 users as well as routers, switches, firewalls, website, and several servers across 10 buildings. I've done all the comparables for both public and private sector positions in the area with similar skill sets and I can tell you that my $38k per year doesn't come close to what I could be making. Like you, I stay where I'm at because I have 2 years left and I can be vested with a pension. Moreover, my benefits are enough right now to make my position a bit more competitive but I could still make more in the private sector even without my benefits.
it_consultant wrote: » Surely your joking, 38K a year? Sheesh! I am sure eliminating your salary or collective bargaining rights (if you have any) will certainly close the budget gap in your state!
erpadmin wrote: » You do realize he's in Detroit, right (well, in the Detroit area...I have yet to meet someone "from Detroit" that actually lived there and not surrounding areas, but perhaps MD will be the first...)? Cost of living isn't exactly high over there. Then again, jobs are not exactly plentiful over there either. $38k is a decent salary over there for what he does. If he wants to make more, he'd have to get out. And you're forgetting the other side of the argument (that I'm obviously not a proponent of, but it still needs to be mentioned). He's not just getting $38k, but tens of thousands more for his other benefits, like health care, pension, and so forth. He pays whatever percentage, but so does his municipality, as well as a good portion of the health care premium.
eMeS wrote: » I really don't get this. The Wis. governor claims that getting rid of collective bargaining is a budgetary issue, but so far has provided no evidence that eliminating collective bargaining addresses their budget deficit. That doesn't seem to be your argument here at all. Government does have the power to enforce a monopoly, and in fact they are an effective monopoly for some services. I fail to see why that means that public sector employees should not have the right to collective bargaining? If you're a private sector employee in any state then you have the right to collective bargaining. Why shouldn't public sector employees have the same right? MS
uhtrinity wrote: » If you listen to the phone call with the "Fake Koch Brother" he shares that he is looking for his "Reagan moment" to break the unions. It isn't about budgets, just making a political statement and changing the political landscape.Did Scott Walker Get Crank-Call Pwned? (AUDIO) UPDATE: YES | Mother Jones
veritas_libertas wrote: » Quoting from MotherJones? I wasn't going to comment again but you made me laugh...
veritas_libertas wrote: » I was certainly not arguing that it didn't happen, just found it funny that you used that source to quote from. If I had used FoxNews I would never have heard the end of it... (I'm not a big fan of Fox by the way)
eansdad wrote: » Erp - Also remember that here in NJ very few if any part of government is putting their share of the pension into the pot. Also we are in the contract negotiations and they are trying to take away our workers comp and give us the 2% it would "save" them. We are not eligable for state workers comp so we would have to provide for our own costing us more then the 2% we would recieve as a raise. Along with this we give 1/2% of our salaries for continued education which they also want to give us in order to "save" money. So they give us a 2.5% raise and we now have to pay for our workers comp and don't get the 6 credits a semester reimbursment. These are the things that collective bargining and our union is trying to stop. We aren't asking for huge raises and not have to pay for health care. They aren't saving any money by giving us the mony instead of using it on works comp insurance and how good are employees that don't want to better themselves (remember this is a school district that doesn't want the non-teacher workers to become more educated). I don't know...maybe I'm just greedy. Sure I made slightly less then $55k last year but almost 1/3rd of it was OT. Not because I wanted it but because they don't want to hire enough people to do the job and they want things done NOW. Maybe I'm greedy because I think our health/dental should be better then those on public assistance? Starting this year I lose $6k because of Chritie's new rules on health care. Since my wife and I both work for the district one of us can not **** the health benifits and collect what used to be 30% of the cost of the package. Those numbers have changed to 25% or $5k which ever is less and with both of us eligable for the system neither of us can collect but private sector it doesn't matter. I don't get bonuses, I don't get raises or promotions after completing certifications or degrees or college credit. Public service haters need to take a hard look at the real working class and see that these attacks hurt people who are like you. Most of us don't make 6 figures with months of paid time off and expense accounts. We are middle class and lower middle class people struggling with our bills and worring about our futures just like everyone else. For the record I am not Republican, I am not Democrat, Socialist or Tea-Party. I think politics is getting in the way of the greater good of the people. George Washington saw this comming and tried to warn us "Beware the two-party system". We have a nation full of reds and blues instead of Americans and it is sad to see people turning on people because of jealousy and greed caused by the very same people who are starting these fights.
erpadmin wrote: » My union is CWA, and hence whatever deal happens in Trenton will effect me too.
ericcumbee wrote: » a friend of mine was attacked by a CWA member protesting outside of her office yesterday.
erpadmin wrote: » Well....it definitely wasn't me. I have never been to a rally. I just pay my dues and vote. I hope you won't make blanket generalizations about me just because of someone acted like a moron.
ericcumbee wrote: » of course not, it was pretty obvious that the guy in that video was an extreme partisan.
eMeS wrote: » Yep, good example of a corporation that is way out of control. Here's the thing...We're all free to vote with our dollars, and in this case I do. I still don't understand why the Republicans would specifically target huge groups of people who are very likely to vote. MS
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