Wisconsin is notoriously liberal, but can you imagine the drama if (hopefully 
when) this happens in California?

I don't know enough about the Wisconsin bill to judge whether it is fair or 
not, but in California our public employee unions, pensions, and budget 
deficits are so deeply intertwined that I'm pretty sure only radical surgery 
has any hope of fixing the situation.

This ain't gonna be pretty...

-- Ernie P.

http://www.cnn.com/2011/US/02/17/wisconsin.budget/

State Democrats absent for vote as Wisconsin budget protests swell


Schools closed, protests continue
Read more about this story from CNN affiliate WISC.

(CNN) -- Sixteen Wisconsin state senators -- 14 of them Democrats -- did not 
appear at the capitol Thursday for a scheduled vote on a bill that would strip 
teachers and other public employees of most of their collective bargaining 
rights and increase their contributions for benefits, lawmakers told CNN.

The bill cleared the Joint Finance Committee Wednesday night on a 12-4 vote and 
was intended move onto the state Senate Thursday for a vote, but the absence of 
so many senators left that vote schedule in question.

Senate Minority Leader Mark Miller said he and fellow Democrats left Madison 
because they were "trying to allow opportunity for democracy to work."

"We will return and do our job, but the governor has to do his job," Miller 
said. He noted their return is contingent on changes to the controversial 
legislation supported by Republican Gov. Scott Walker.

Thousands of people gathered in Madison, Wisconsin, on Thursday, protesting a 
bill that would strip teachers and other public employees of most of their 
collective bargaining rights and increase their contributions for benefits.

Demonstrators spilled into the state's Capitol building, chanting, "This is our 
house" and "Forward not backward," voicing their opposition to the bill.

White House Press Secretary Jay Carney said President Barack Obama described 
the ongoing confrontation "more like an assault on unions" and their capacity 
for collective bargaining.

"He doesn't see that as a good thing," Carney said. "The president believes, 
the secretary of education believes that the best way to deal with this is for 
people to address these problems by sitting down at the table to collaborate 
and work out a solution."

At least 15 school systems in Wisconsin canceled class for a second day, said 
Madison Metropolitan School District spokesman Ken Syke, because of a call by 
the Wisconsin Education Association Council for people to come to the Capitol 
on Thursday and Friday to "stand beside your neighbors, family and friends to 
help our voices be heard."

Syke earlier said about 40 percent of 2,600 teachers, assistants, social 
workers and psychologists in the bargaining unit called in sick late Tuesday, 
forcing the Madison district to cancel Wednesday's classes for 24,500 students.

School officials in Oregon, south of Madison, said they canceled classes 
Thursday because of anticipated staff absences.

CNN affiliate WISC listed the multiple school closings on its website.

Walker has said the measure is meant to address a burgeoning budget crisis, 
while unions contend his bill is an assault on worker rights.

"This is all about balancing the budget," Walker wrote on his Twitter account. 
"WI needs leadership."

Walker is asking legislators to pass his Budget Repair Bill to combat a $137 
million shortfall through June 30. An upcoming two-year budget for 2011-13 must 
address a pending $3.6 billion deficit, he said.

The bill cleared the Joint Finance Committee Wednesday night on a 12-4 vote and 
can now move on to the state Senate.

In a budgetary scenario being played out in other cash-strapped states and 
municipalities, the legislation requires workers to cover more of their health 
care premiums and pension contributions, although supporters say local 
governments will decide on health care contribution for their employees.

The legislation also requires collective bargaining units to conduct annual 
votes to maintain certification. Unions would lose the right to have dues 
deducted from worker paychecks and collective bargaining could cover only wages.

The bill has prompted protests from public employees and supporters. On 
Tuesday, an estimated 13,000 people thronged to the Capitol, followed by 10,000 
Wednesday, said Carla Vigue, spokeswoman for the Department of Administration.

Unions said the number of protesters was much higher.

The Republican governor said he appreciates "the fact that the folks here today 
will have a chance to have their voices heard ... but I want to be sure the 
taxpayers of Wisconsin will have their chance to have their voices heard."

"Calling this a budget bill is a smokescreen," said Bryan Kennedy, president of 
AFT-Wisconsin, which represents about 17,000 employees. "This is an attack on 
all labor organizations."

Sign-carrying protesters jammed the Capitol rotunda on Tuesday and Wednesday, 
chanting "Kill the bill" and "Workers Unite." Thousands more marched outside in 
the snow.

Republican U.S. Rep. Paul Ryan compared the protests in his state's capital to 
those in Egypt that led to the resignation of Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak.

Walker is "getting riots, it's like Cairo's moved to Madison these days," Ryan 
said Thursday on MSNBC's "Morning Joe."

A spokeswoman for the Wisconsin Education Association Council said the issue 
"goes far beyond what's being discussed as a budget."

"It affects the very people who work on the front lines who will no longer have 
a voice in workplace," said union spokeswoman Christina Brey.

The governor, who took his campaign for the bill to his Twitter account, said 
he was talking with some legislators about protections for workers.

Walker's press secretary, Cullen Werwie, told CNN he expects the measure to 
reach the Senate on Thursday and, possibly, the Assembly (lower chamber) on 
Friday. Both chambers are controlled by Republicans, but the legislation likely 
faces a tougher test in the Senate.

Under the bill, public employees in the Wisconsin Retirement System would pay 
about 5.8% of their salaries toward pensions, up significantly from 0.2%, 
Werwie said. And state workers would pay for 12.6% of their monthly health care 
premiums, up from between 4% and 6% percent.

Pay raises would be limited to inflation, unless a referendum approves of a 
larger increase.

"This is not something unusual," Walker said of the employee contributions. 
"That is what middle-class workers in this state have experienced."

The legislation would save the state about $30 million between now and the end 
of June and, if continued, an estimated $300 million during the next two years, 
Walker has said. He said workers in the private sector pay higher percentages 
of their pay for health care and pensions.

The governor visited private businesses on Tuesday, arguing the bill would end 
furloughs and prevent layoffs.

"People viewed what we are proposing as modest," he said.

The changes do not apply to to police, firefighters and state troopers, who 
would continue to bargain for their benefits.

But the proposed curtailing of most collective bargaining rights among public 
employees has drawn the most vocal complaints. There are about 300,000 state 
and local workers in the heavily unionized state.

Of 425 primary and secondary school systems, for example, employees at all but 
two are covered by AFT-Wisconsin or the National Education Association, Kennedy 
told CNN.

Walker, he claimed, is ignoring $100 million in previous employee concessions 
and wants to take his measure directly to a vote rather than negotiate.

Calling Wisconsin a "state in turmoil," Kennedy said the debate is "not a 
financial issue. It is about worker rights."

His group is calling for more rallies on Thursday to "keep the pressure on."

The website for the American Federation of State, County and Municipal 
Employees featured a video of interviews with union workers.

"This is the state where collective bargaining for public employees started," 
one said. "If Wisconsin falls, so does the nation."

Because of the budget imbroglio, the Madison school district warned teachers 
that they would be docked pay if they were sick Wednesday through Friday and 
returned without a note from a medical provider, Syke said. They may face other 
sanctions.

Although Superintendent Daniel A. Nerad wrote Walker, asking him to return to 
the table to discuss collective bargaining, he also has said "our No. 1 
responsibility is to instruct students," Syke said.

Some students left school Tuesday to join the protests, the spokesman said.

Many states, including California and New York, are grappling with budget 
deficit crises.

A month after Illinois lawmakers approved a massive tax hike, Gov. Pat Quinn on 
Wednesday unveiled a $35.4 billion budget that depends on state lawmakers 
approving $8.7 billion in new borrowing largely to clear a towering stack of 
unpaid bills.

The budget, which increases spending by $1.7 billion from the previous year and 
closes a $13 billion gap, slashes programs for the elderly, the poor and the 
disabled, but leaves education funding largely untouched. No layoffs of state 
workers are suggested.

"There are some tough decisions that are going to have to made on the revenue 
side and the spending side," said Elizabeth McNichol, senior fellow at the 
Washington-based Center on Budget and Policy Priorities.

State revenues are -- at the national average -- 11 percent below pre-recession 
levels largely because of high unemployment and other effects of the economic 
downturn, she said.

"People are out of work and not buying as much," McNichol noted.

With fewer budget contributions that, in part, stem from the higher 
unemployment numbers, public sector services and long-standing contractual 
obligations could suffer, she explained.

In New York, Mayor Michael Bloomberg presented budget plans Thursday that could 
eliminate more than 6,000 teaching jobs in the next fiscal year.

Last month, mayor of crime-ridden Camden, New Jersey, announced layoffs of 
nearly half of the city's police force and close to a third of its fire 
department.

One hundred sixty-eight police officers and 67 firefighters were laid off, as 
officials struggle to close a $26.5 million budget gap through a series of 
belt-tightening measures, Mayor Dana Redd told reporters.

In California, Gov. Jerry Brown imposed a statewide hiring freeze across all 
government agencies.

The comprehensive freeze applies to vacant, seasonal and full- and part-time 
jobs, and even prohibits the hiring of outside contractors or transferring 
employees between agencies or department, he said in a news release.

"All the low-hanging fruit has been picked in terms of budget options," said 
Arturo Perez, a budget analyst at the National Conference of State Legislatures.

Thirty-five U.S. states and Puerto Rico reported projected budget shortfalls 
for fiscal year 2012 totaling $82.1 billion, according to the conference.

"As most federal stimulus dollars will have been exhausted, a common phrase we 
hear from states across the country is that 'we're very much on our own this 
year,'" he said.

According to a recent Center on Budget and Policy Priorities report, pension 
obligations currently account for an average of 3.8 percent of state spending.

In Wisconsin, Gov. Walker says he is trying to address the shortfall by 
requiring workers to contribute more.

>From around the web


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