Dispatcher: My life is 'lower middle class'

 

 

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/42343920/ns/business-careers/

 

A lot of boys play with fire trucks when they're little. Most soon outgrow
their fascination. For dispatcher Ken Gilbertie, the attraction of fighting
fires never faded. 

"It has always been in me," he said in an interview punctuated by the squawk
of radio chatter in the communications center of the Westport, Conn., Fire
Department. "Being a firefighter is not something that you do; it's
something that you are."

Firefighting runs in Gilbertie's family: His father was a volunteer, and his
grandfather and two cousins were career firefighters. As a kid, Gilbertie,
46, remembers spending Saturday nights watching the TV show "Emergency!" as
it followed the adventures of two fictional paramedics.  Gilbertie became a
fixture at the local firehouse and raced through his paper route after
school to watch his real-life heroes in action.

"I used to chase everything that I could reasonably get to on my bike," he
said. 

Lately, though, Westport firefighters have been cast in a less favorable
light, reflecting growing national sentiment about unionized public workers.


Westport firefighters have been working without a contract for nearly two
years, and the town's legislative body, the Representative Town Meeting,
rejected a new four-year pact as too generous after the union and town
officials reached a tentative agreement. Negotiations are now in
arbitration.

Matthew Mandell, a member of the Representative Town Meeting, which is
similar to a Town Council, said that while there's plenty of public support
for town workers, raising wages and benefits has become a much tougher sell
to his constituents working in the private sector.

"They're not doing as well as they were doing before because they're not
under contract," he said, referring to his constituents. "They're living out
in the real world where they're employed at will. They don't have these
guarantees. They're paying more for their benefits, and this isn't occurring
in the public sector."

Gilbertie said the union recognizes that money is tight and made
concessions, including agreeing to having its members pay a bigger share of
health care costs. 

"I didn't take this job to get rich," said Gilbertie, who is vice president
of his union local. "You take a job with AIG to get rich. That's not why I
took this job."

1.      Faces of the public sector 

1.      The end of an era?
<http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/42329275/ns/business-careers/> 1
<https://www.readability.com/articles/orpedqmh?legacy_bookmarklet=1#rdb-foot
note-1>  

Public union workers have become targets of politicians, pundits and
ordinary citizens who think their salaries are too high and their jobs too
cushy. 

2.      Loud and clear
<http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/42343920/ns/business-careers/> 2
<https://www.readability.com/articles/orpedqmh?legacy_bookmarklet=1#rdb-foot
note-2>  

A Connecticut fire dispatcher says his union wages have kept him solidly
'lower middle class." But, he says, "I didn't take this job to get rich." 

3.      Trash talk
<http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/42324794/ns/business-careers/> 3
<https://www.readability.com/articles/orpedqmh?legacy_bookmarklet=1#rdb-foot
note-3>  

A Delaware sanitation worker considers taking a second job to make ends
meet. He bemoans shrill anti-union talk: "They don't know half of what our
jobs entail." 

4.      Taught a lesson
<http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/42306729/ns/business-us_business/> 4
<https://www.readability.com/articles/orpedqmh?legacy_bookmarklet=1#rdb-foot
note-4>  

A Wisconsin teacher wonders - four years into the career she's wanted her
entire life - if she made the right choice as the state attacks her union. 

As a result, he said, taxpayers are giving public workers' pay and benefit
packages closer scrutiny than they did when the economy was booming and jobs
were plentiful.

Gilbertie, who began working as a part-time dispatcher in 1987 and moved to
full-time a year later, gets an annual salary of $54,000 plus $14,000 to
$16,000 in overtime. He said he pays about 4 percent of that into a defined
benefit pension plan
<http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/42343920/ns/business-careers/> 5
<https://www.readability.com/articles/orpedqmh?legacy_bookmarklet=1#rdb-foot
note-5>  that will pay him roughly 80 percent of his base salary after 35
years of service. 

Another 5 percent of his salary goes to pay for health insurance, which
comes with a $10 co-pay for doctor visits and a $200 deductible. The town
also pays his premiums on a $50,000 life insurance policy
<http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/42343920/ns/business-careers/> 6
<https://www.readability.com/articles/orpedqmh?legacy_bookmarklet=1#rdb-foot
note-6> , he said. 

He and his wife, a nurse, live in a 1,200 square-foot, two bedroom townhouse
with his wife's parents. His grown son is an accountant; one of his two
daughters is in college. He drives a 1999 Mercury Mountaineer with roughly
200,000 miles on it; his wife drives a 2002 Saturn with 120,000 miles. 

'Lower middle class' 
It is, he said, a solidly "lower middle class" lifestyle. 

"I'm paying the bills, I'm putting food on the table and keeping a roof over
my head and have a little left over to take a vacation every year-and-a-half
or two years," he said. "I do consider myself lucky compared to a lot of
people." 

The proposed new contract would keep the current salary scale unchanged for
the first year and then give pay raises of  2.75 percent for the next three
years. It also doubled health insurance co-pays and raised workers payments
for health insurance premiums to $36 a week from $31.

Compared with many of the taxpayers he serves, Gilbertie's family lives
modestly. Located about an hour by train from Manhattan, the town of
Westport has a median household income of $151,000 - three times the
national average. The median home price is roughly $1.2 million - more than
six times the U.S. average of $185,000. 

That pricey real estate helps keep local property tax rates about half the
average in Connecticut towns and cities. Last year Westport homeowners paid
$14.80 in taxes for every $1,000 in their home's assessed value, or about
$14,000 on a $1 million home. Homeowners in Hartford paid $72.79 per $1,000;
in New Haven, homeowners paid $43.90. 

The housing boom was good to Westport homeowners: property values roughly
tripled between 1997 and 2006. When the good times were rolling, elected
officials found ways to tap that rising home equity wealth. The town budget
roughly doubled, and there was heavy borrowing to fund an ambitious overhaul
of the school infrastructure. Total debt outstanding swelled from $3.1
million in 1998 to $170 million last year. 

Like most towns and states, Westport's budget also was expanding to cover
the rising costs of pension and health care costs, according to Gordon
Joseloff, Westport's first selectman - the equivalent of mayor - who
recently proposed a roughly 3 percent increase in next year's town budget. 

"What we're raising their taxes for is not because we've increased our costs
of operating the town," he said. "We're paying to put money into health care
costs. I call it the second-biggest department in the Town of Westport: It's
the Department of Pensions and Health Care. And it's second only to the
Board of Education." 

To rein in costs, town officials are pushing to convert workers' pension
plan to a defined-contribution plan in the next few years. Union leaders
chafe at the idea that higher benefit costs are behind the fiscal crises at
state capitols and town halls across the country. 

'Preposterous' 
"It's preposterous," said Larry Dornan, a spokesman for the state chapter of
the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, the union
that represents Westport municipal workers. "This economic crisis happened
because of the financial crisis, because of broad tax cuts, because of the
military run-up. It had nothing to do with AFSCME negotiating a pension for
its members."

As private sector workers have lost ground over the past decade, public
employees' benefits have held up relatively well, according to the Bureau of
Labor Statistics. From 2000 through 2010, wage gains were similar, with both
public and private workers seeing wage growth of about 30 percent. But the
gains in benefits for public workers rose 61 percent during the period,
compared with just 42 percent for private-sector workers.

Higher pension costs in Westport aren't so much a function of bigger monthly
retirement checks as an increase in longevity. Workers will be collecting
more checks later in life, so pension accounting rules require that those
increased liabilities have to be funded today. 

Health care costs present the town with a similar problem. Town workers have
roughly the same access to health care that they did a generation ago. But
the cost of new drugs, tests and procedures cost substantially more. Health
care premiums have risen 138 percent in the past decade, far outstripping
wage increases. 

The strain on state and local budgets has intensified over the past several
years as governments due to a new accounting rule that requires them to
report the full impact of post-retirement benefits rather than just pay them
as they're incurred. Ironically the rule designed to insure those benefits
were fully funded has made them a bigger target for cutbacks. 

"If we were to fund them at the levels that the actuaries recommend, we
would have to greatly increase our tax rate," said Joseloff. "There's the
rub." 

For Gilbertie, the appeal of the job hasn't dimmed much since he dreamed as
a kid that one day he would be working in the fire department.

"There's a great deal of satisfaction when people call back after the call
is over and say, 'Your guys were wonderful. Thank you so much. I want to
talk to the guys. Who was it that came?'" he said. 

"And to know that their world is better because of something that I was
directly in involved in. It's huge." 

  _____  


References


1.      ^
<https://www.readability.com/articles/orpedqmh?legacy_bookmarklet=1#rdb-foot
note-link-1>  The end of an era?
<http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/42329275/ns/business-careers/>
(www.msnbc.msn.com) (
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/42329275/ns/business-careers/ )
2.      ^
<https://www.readability.com/articles/orpedqmh?legacy_bookmarklet=1#rdb-foot
note-link-2>  Loud and clear
<http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/42343920/ns/business-careers/>
(www.msnbc.msn.com) (
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/42343920/ns/business-careers/ )
3.      ^
<https://www.readability.com/articles/orpedqmh?legacy_bookmarklet=1#rdb-foot
note-link-3>  Trash talk
<http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/42324794/ns/business-careers/>
(www.msnbc.msn.com) (
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/42324794/ns/business-careers/ )
4.      ^
<https://www.readability.com/articles/orpedqmh?legacy_bookmarklet=1#rdb-foot
note-link-4>  Taught a lesson
<http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/42306729/ns/business-us_business/>
(www.msnbc.msn.com) (
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/42306729/ns/business-us_business/ )
5.      ^
<https://www.readability.com/articles/orpedqmh?legacy_bookmarklet=1#rdb-foot
note-link-5> pension plan
<http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/42343920/ns/business-careers/>
(www.msnbc.msn.com) (
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/42343920/ns/business-careers/ )
6.      ^
<https://www.readability.com/articles/orpedqmh?legacy_bookmarklet=1#rdb-foot
note-link-6> insurance policy
<http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/42343920/ns/business-careers/>
(www.msnbc.msn.com) (
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/42343920/ns/business-careers/ )

  _____  

 

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