Battleground Wisconsin

Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker has precipitated a huge political brawl in Wisconsin by filing a bill that would force Wisconsin employees to shoulder more of their own health care and pension obligations, as well as stripping away a huge swarth of collective bargaining rights from most public sector unions. The unions are in the streets, taking the battle to the Governor and the Republican Legislature, while absent Democratic Senators prevent a quorum and block action on the Republican bill.

This political battle has taken on implications beyond Wisconsin, with national labor and Democratic Party resources being thrown into the fight. On the Republican side Governor Walker is receiving support from a broad spectrum of national Republicans, including the Republican Governors Association and Speaker John Boehner.

On the wage and benefit side the Governor is asking employees to shoulder more of the costs of their health care and pensions. From the New York Times:

Mr. Walker would require state employees to contribute 5.8 percent of their pay to their pensions, where most now pay far less, and require state employees to pay at least 12.6 percent of health care premiums (most pay about 6 percent now). The average salary for a Wisconsin state worker is $48,348, according to a recent report by the liberal-leaning Economic Policy Institute in Washington.

Leaving aside the collective bargaining issues it appears to me that the financial requests of the Governor are in line. The employee contributions in both of these areas are ridiculously low in Wisconsin, and with a looming $3.6 billion dollar deficit for the next two year cycle these adjustments are both necessary and justified. Why do I think that. The numbers, which many choose to ignore or cherry pick, tell the story. These are from the Governor’s website dealing with a ten year run of health care numbers.

In 2001 taxpayers contributed $423 million dollars to state employee health insurance premiums, while in 2011 taxpayers contributed more than $1 billion dollars. In 2011, state employees paid $64 million toward their health insurance, or about 5.6% of the total cost. (ETF Health Care Analysis)

·From 2001 to 2010 taxpayers spent more than $8 billion dollars on state employee health care coverage—over the same period of time state employees contributed about $398 million. (ETF Health Care Analysis)

$1 billion for taxpayers against $64 million for employees is not in the ballpark. And it appears that at this point even Wisconsin’s unions agree. Based on the reports I have seen they are willing to accept the changes put forward by the Governor in terms of increased employee contributions. Even Washington Post writer Ezra Klein agrees that the financial adjustments are beyond argument:

If all Walker was doing was reforming public employee benefits, I’d have little problem with it. There’s too much deferred compensation in public employee packages, and though the blame for that structure lies partially with the government officials and state residents who wanted to pay later for services now, it’s true that situations change and unsustainable commitments require reforms.

The problem lies in the attack on collective bargaining rights.

The Governor can rightly be faulted on several fronts here. The first one that comes to mind is the exemption his legislation gives to police and fire. The fact that those unions were more supportive of his candidacy for governor makes the exemptions even more suspect than they would be under normal circumstances. The Governor, in my opinion, has vastly overreached on this issue. His strategy has been turned upside down, with his original thought that the wide acceptance of the increased financial burden on employees would allow him to change fundamental collective bargaining rights is now in real doubt. And he has allowed the unions to change the focus, from the financial to the right to bargain collectively. It is now a death match politically, with labor facing the potential of being overrun in several different states. If the Governor is successful it will be as important of an event as Reagan’s breaking of the Air Traffic Controllers strike.

On collective bargaining, as mentioned, I believe the Governor is wrong. But even there labor has continued to make missteps nationally, and has seen even liberal states, like Massachusetts, prepared to limit the collective bargaining rights of public sector unions. Why is that? For one labor, in the face of the worst economy in decades, has refused, in many cases, to consider common sense measures that would help their members as much as management. In Massachusetts the Legislature acted, by edict, to force MBTA employees into the GIC and to modify collectively bargained retiree health care rights, as well as retirement rights. They seem poised to do the same on municipal health care. And it absolutely did not have to happen that way, but labor simply was so out of step with reality that even a pro-labor legislature was forced to act. It is time for labor to realize that no matter what has been negotiated numbers like the ones cited above for ten year health care spending in Wisconsin are not sustainable, and that raising taxes to the extent necessary to support pension and health care obligations, as currently exist, is not possible. My last word on this is that once again health care costs are ripping the country apart, state by state. The one thing that responsible management and labor should agree on is that without real health care cost containment we are all going to be out of business, and real soon.

Posted in National News | Tagged , | 1 Comment

Ryan, Republicans Step Up on Entitlements

Well on this blog I have (in order) praised, criticized, and now must praise again Paul Ryan. My praise does not necessarily stem from agreement with all of his prescriptions for solving the budget deficit problem. But he now says that the House Republican budget, due in April, will go where the Obama budget did not, to entitlement reform. As a political matter some would say that the Republicans are falling into a political trap, but Ryan has simply dismissed those concerns, saying that he and the caucus will provide leadership where the President did not. Let us see what is proposed, but Ryan is talking the right talk. Also talking that talk, nationally, is New Jersey Governor Chris Christie. He gave a talk in Washington that was highly anticipated, and it did not disappoint. He criticized both parties for being afraid of the politics of entitlement reform, and talked about some of what needs to be done in that area. Although I have not written about Mitch Daniels a whole lot he is another Republican Governor who is speaking about things that need to be done to bring our fiscal house in order. Daniels even had the temerity to raise revenues in Indiana, but he has made some tough decisions and put Indiana on the right track fiscally. In New York Democrat Andrew Cuomo is stepping up and making some tough calls, along with a lot of straight talk. He has advocated for a property tax cap, and is calling for some real and painful budget cuts. These folks have one thing in common: they are telling the truth about the fiscal situation, and they are doing things that many felt were not doable politically. And their poll numbers are rising, not falling.

I have whacked around the Republicans when they deserve it, but today I must cede a bit of ground. Tomorrow is another day. Read the Politico story on Ryan here.

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/32545640

Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/32545640

Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , | Leave a comment

The President on the Budget

The President takes on the press over his budget submission, admitting that he has not tackled the big budget drivers but urging “patience” as he works on longer term bipartisan solutions. He talked about Social Security, saying he felt that it only needed minor tweeks to be made solvent for the long term, and defended his not putting forth changes in the budget for medicare and medicaid, saying that he is prepared to negotiate solutions only on a bipartisan basis, and he is not going to put forward an “Obama plan” without some Republican participation. The dance continues.

Posted in National News | Tagged | Leave a comment

Tiptoeing By the Can

The President submitted his budget yesterday, and it has received generally negative reviews. And from a deficit reduction perspective it should be criticized. The President, in the first move in what promises to be an interesting game of budgetary chess, has essentially punted on any real change in the budget, leaving the heavy lifting to the Republicans. So it is now the move of the Republicans in the House to produce a budget that reflects what they campaigned on. I think the best quip on the Presidents submission came from Rep. Paul Ryan, who said the submission was “debt on arrival.” And Ryan issued a press release saying that the Republicans were ready to take up the fiscal challenge:

“The President’s budget spends too much, taxes too much, and borrows too much – stifling job growth today and leaving our children with a diminished future. In this critical test of leadership, the President has failed to tackle the urgent fiscal and economic threats before us.”

“Failing to heed the warnings of economists and the demands of the American people, the President’s budget accelerates our country down the path to bankruptcy. Far from ‘living within its means,’ the President’s budget puts the government on track to nearly double in size since the day he took office – a direct result of his party’s reckless spending spree. His budget destroys jobs by imposing a $1.6 trillion tax hike, adding $13 trillion to the national debt and fueling uncertainty in the private sector.

“We cannot tax, spend and borrow our way to prosperity. Where the President has fallen short, Republicans will work to chart a new course – advancing a path to prosperity by cutting spending, keeping taxes low, reforming government, and rising to meet the challenges of our time.”

Dana Milbank over at the Washington Post said the obvious; The President is kicking the can down the road. Milbank writes that since the saying of the day is that we can no longer kick the can down the road the President is trying to tiptoe by the can, and hope nobody notices.

Obama’s budget proposal is a remarkably weak and timid document. He proposes to cut only $1.1 trillion from federal deficits over the next decade – a pittance when you consider that the deficit this year alone is in the neighborhood of $1.5 trillion. The president makes no serious attempt at cutting entitlement programs that threaten to drive the government into insolvency.

The only defense to offer at this point is that the President is willing to go further, but will try to flush out the Republicans politically. And from a political standpoint I understand the strategy, but I think that the public is willing to respect leadership that gives real perspectives and lets the chips fall where they may. I think he needs to lead, and let the politics take care of themselves. Chris Christie in New Jersey, and Andrew Cuomo in New York have shown that making tough choices does not mean political oblivion, and in fact can mean political gain. The games are just beginning.

Posted in National News | Tagged , | 2 Comments

The 12 Percent Solution Part 2

Some Morning Joe clips, including a Rand Paul clip, talking about spending at the federal level. Today on Fox News Paul Ryan was on with Chris Wallace talking about cutting and deficits. So at about the 8:40 mark of the video it gets a bit interesting. I have said some good things about Ryan, and I continue to believe he has, on an individual basis, put forward proposals that take some political courage. But now that he represents the Republican caucus he begins to sling some nonsense, starting with his contention that the President had punted on the deficit because he (the President) created a commission to deal with it and then ignored its findings. Thankfully Wallace called him on it, pointing out that HE WAS ON THE COMMISSION, AND VOTED AGAINST ACCEPTING ITS FINDINGS. After he stammered his way through a response he then refused to say whether the Republicans would deal with entitlement reform in 2012. Too early because of CBO baselines, or some such nonsense. Ryan then indicated that the President must lead on this issue. Ahhh, so now Ryan wants to follow the Presidents lead. I was unaware of that, thinking that the Republicans were going to carve out spending reforms across the board and get us to a balanced budget. More on the Presidents budget submission tomorrow.

http://video.foxnews.com/v/embed.js?id=4537084&w=466&h=263Watch the latest video at video.foxnews.com
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/32545640

Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/32545640

Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

Posted in National News | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

The 12% Solution

The President spent his weekly address on the upcoming budget submission, and on the federal deficit. He, like the Republicans in the House, has chosen to emphasize reductions or freezes in spending on the so called discretionary portion of the budget, which constitutes a very small piece of the overall budget. While we have not seen his submission yet we can assume, based on today’s message, that he will not venture into the only areas where you can really make appreciable headway on the deficit, namely defense spending and entitlements. The President makes no reference to the deficit commission, and like the House Republicans, spins a budgetary tale that would have us reducing the deficit by $400 billion over a decade. That figure is as laughable as the Republican effort.

The President did say something that I agree with, which is that we need to continue to make needed investments in certain areas. But his policies, which are Republican lite, focus all of the deficit cutting effort into exactly the areas where we may need some additional spending. On top of that there is no realistic hope of actually making a dent in the deficit by cutting only in those areas, and you allow the Republicans to claim to be driving spending reductions that are real, but ineffectual in cutting the deficit. It is politically difficult, but the President must lead on this issue, and lay the groundwork for sane fiscal management that does not restrict cuts to the 12% of the budget that is the current target.

Posted in State News | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

Governor Patrick Reforms Indigent Defense

Governor Deval Patrick, in his recently submitted budget, proposes to save some $40 million dollars by overhauling the way the Commonwealth provides lawyers for indigent defendants. Currently the Commonwealth utilizes the services of about three thousand private contract lawyers to provide legal counsel to those who cannot afford to hire their own lawyers. This bill has been about $160 million annually, and has also been a real sore point with the District Attorneys, who have maintained that the defense bar is seeing budget increases at a time when their own budgets are being cut. The Governor proposes to hire one thousand lawyers and support staff to bring this function back “in house”. His estimate is that the savings will be over $40 million, and that number is reflected in his proposed budget. It is fair to say that the defense bar, seeing that $160 million dollars disappear, will put up a strenuous fight against the Governor in the Legislature. It appears to me that the Governor suspects that the private lawyers are doing some “bill padding”. This is his way of getting his arm around those costs while addressing the concerns of the state’s District Attorneys. The Globe seems to think it is a good idea. Read their support editorial here.

Posted in State News | Tagged , | 2 Comments

Jim Munro is February Artist of the Month

Photographer’s Work on Display in the Mayor’s Office

Mayor William M. Manzi has named Jim Munro as February’s Artist of the Month. Jim has lived in Methuen for 35 years with his wife Pam. He is the father of Alison Munro Walsh and Andrew Munro.
Jim is the owner of Munro Graphics Commercial Printers in Lawrence. Munro Graphics was a Methuen Square landmark for many years.

Light and shapes, both those found in nature and manmade, inspire Jim’s photography. He finds his subjects in the woods of the Merrimack Valley, among the stone mills of Lawrence, on the beaches of Plum Island, and in the rural countryside of his adopted part time home of Prince Edward Island, Canada.

Jim’s style of photography can only be described as eclectic. It’s a blend of black and white minimalism and colorful landscapes.

Mayor Manzi stated, “I’d like to personally thank Jim for his participation in this program. He is one of the many talented photographers working and living in our community. It is an honor to display Jim’s photographs. I encourage people to come to my office and view his work.”

The Methuen Artist of the Month Program was created by Mayor Manzi five years ago in order to give members of the Methuen Arts Community a forum to display their work and to encourage participation in Methuen’s growing creative economy. Methuen artists interested in being considered for Artist of the Month should contact the Mayor’s Office.

Jim Munro, February Artist of the Month

Posted in Methuen | Tagged , | Leave a comment

Municipal Leaders Letter on Health Care Reform

Below is the letter that was printed in yesterday’s Tribune, and that has received coverage throughout the State, signed by Mayors and Managers throughout Massachusetts.

A PLEA FOR MUNICIPAL HEALTH INSURANCE REFORM

and Support for Governor Patrick’s Municipal Health Insurance Bill

As has been well reported, health care costs for municipal employees are growing at an unsustainable rate. Finding ways to curb this dramatic growth is absolutely essential to maintaining basic city services. The annual increase in municipal health care costs is robbing money from our schools, public safety efforts, public works projects and other important programs.

Local leaders have been clamoring for municipal health insurance reform for many years as a way to help manage budgets during these fiscally challenging times. With that in mind, we are writing to express our support for legislation proposed by the Governor entitled, “An Act Further Strengthening the Commonwealth’s Partnership with its Municipalities” which aims to provide material and immediate savings to communities facing soaring health insurance costs.

This proposal will require that municipalities and its unions engage in expedited negotiations to establish new health insurance coverage, either by joining the Group Insurance Commission (GIC) or adopting local plans with benefits comparable to those provided by the GIC. If the parties can not reach agreement within the expedited negotiation period, the municipality will have the right, without a union veto, to either join the GIC or adopt the lower cost plans. This represents a multi-million dollar savings to municipalities, helping many communities to avert an out and out budget crisis. And a switch to the GIC will provide local employees with some of the top rated commercial plans in the nation with benefits that are at least as generous as those provided to over 300,000 state and municipal employees and their families. By any measure, employees will continue to receive quality health care at a reasonable price.

For far too long municipalities in Massachusetts have been denied authority to manage and moderate rising health insurance costs. While we have been able to work with our collective bargaining unions on a host of issues, solving the problem of rising employee health care costs has been much more elusive. Now more than ever, providing Mayors and Managers this vital tool is critical to balancing local budgets as we struggle to absorb even further reductions in local aid. Although additional work will be required of the Administration to finalize the regulations, in order to implement the necessary savings by the start of the next fiscal year, it is imperative that the Legislature act swiftly to adopt the proposed measure now. We urge legislators to make municipal health insurance reform their highest priority and quickly approve this measure so that savings can be achieved in Fiscal Year 2012, which begins July 1st.

After several years of mulling over this issue, we need this bill passed so that we can continue providing municipal services at the quality our residents have come to expect, but with the cost savings and efficiencies that taxpayers demand.

Jay Ash, City Manager of Chelsea
Thatcher Kezer, Mayor of Amesbury
Tom Ambrosino, Mayor of Revere
Carolyn Kirk, Mayor of Gloucester
Andrew Bisignani, Town Manager of Saugus
Scott Lang, Mayor of New Bedford
Michael Bonfanti, Mayor of Peabody
Bernard Lynch, City Manager of Lowell
Joseph Curtatone, Mayor of Somerville
William Manzi, Mayor of Methuen
Rob Dolan, Mayor of Melrose
Wayne Marquis, Town Manager of Danvers
Kim Driscoll, Mayor of Salem
Andrew Maylor, Town Admin of Swampscott
Clare Higgins, Mayor of Northampton
William Scanlon, Mayor of Beverly

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged | 2 Comments

Rand Paul: Real Republican Ideology

Rand Paul, in the inverse of the politically weak House Republican effort, took to the Subway interview series on ABC to talk about the $500 billion dollar in cuts he is proposing to this years budget. Unlike the House Republicans, Rand Paul is willing to talk about the real ramifications of his proposals, and is willing to show how he would balance the budget. He talks about the need for defense cuts, the lack of courage amongst Republicans in detailing what needs to be done to balance the budget, and his calls for the elimination of all foreign aid, including aid to Israel. Agree or not Rand Paul, unlike Paul Ryan, is willing to stand up and back up his campaign rhetoric with SPECIFIC proposals to eliminate spending and actually balance the budget. Paul’s refusal to consider any hike in revenues (tax increases) is not papered over. His position is that you should try to achieve balance through spending cuts alone. I don’t agree, but the man is willing to admit when the numbers do not work, and willing to say that his methodology would require specific and steep spending cuts that will generate real political opposition. After the embarrassing House Republican proposals on this years budget Paul will allow you a true glimpse of where we would go with the Republicans. Give him credit for that. Read the Politico story here.

http://abcnews.go.com/assets/player/walt2.6/flash/SFP_Walt_2_65.swf

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , | 3 Comments