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PEP April 2009
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Public Employee Press

Political Action 2009

Black, Puerto Rican, Hispanic and Asian Legislators Caucus
Shaping the agenda in Albany


DC 37 local presidents and leaders are pictured with City Council members and state legislators at the union’s reception during the 38th annual Black and Puerto Rican Caucus in Albany Feb. 14-16.




We are in a battle
to make the
budget right for working people.
The mayor spent billions to build Yankee Stadium,
but he wants us to sacrifice ourpensions.
—Oliver Gray
Associate Director


We need real tax reform. Let the
rich, who can
afford it, pay a
little more. New York should invest in its people, in public services, hospitals and schools.
—Ralph Palladino
2nd VP, Local 1549


MELS attorneys were panelists at the Consumer Affairs workshop during the caucus weekend.

By DIANE S. WILLIAMS

Pressing Gov. David Paterson and Albany lawmakers for a fairer budget, DC 37 showed its strength at the 38th annual New York State Black, Puerto Rican, Hispanic and Asian Legislators caucus on the weekend of Feb. 14-16.

“We are facing a battle to make the budget right,” said DC 37 Associate Director Oliver Gray, who carried the union’s “Tax the Rich” message to the Albany conference: “The mayor has billions to build a new Yankee Stadium, he spent $9 billion on private contractors, but he wants us to give up our pensions and benefits. He’s trying to turn back the clock. But we gave at the office and we can’t sacrifice anymore just to make a billionaire happy!”


Let mayoral
control sunset so
we can restore power and voice to parents and bring commmunity involvement back
to our public schools.
—Santos Crespos
Exec. VP, Local 372

The legislative conference celebrated the inauguration of Barack Obama as the 44th U.S. president, and honored political trailblazers such as U.S. Congress member Charles Rangel, former New York Mayor David Dinkins, state Senate Majority Leader Malcolm Smith and Assembly member Denny Farrell. DC 37 Secretary Cliff Koppelman accepted the Labor Award, which the union won for its Municipal Employees Housing Program.

Caucus festivities were tempered by participants’ concerns over the proposed budget cuts that would slash millions of dollars statewide in funds from essential health care, education, housing and other services.

Williams: “Follow the money”

“The labor movement represents just 12 percent of the U.S. workforce, and many in power are trying to take what we have,” said Maf Misbah Uddin, DC 37 treasurer and Local 1407 president. “Let’s tell the politicians, ‘You created the problem, not us!’”

“We’re making sure stimulus monies are earmarked to preserve the social service safety net our members provide. We have to follow the money!” said Political Director Wanda Williams. The planned state cuts threaten the jobs of thousands of state and municipal employees and their right to retire in dignity, she said.

DC 37 leaders and staff helped shape discussions on mayoral control of public education, the state budget, public housing, the health care safety net, consumer affairs, immigration and other issues at workshops where panelists included Local 371 President Faye Moore, Local 768 President Fitz Reid, Local 436 President Judith Arroyo, Local 372 Executive Vice President Santos Crespo, Local 1549 2nd Vice President Ralph Palladino, Political Director Wanda Williams, MELS Attorney Joan Foy and Assistant Research and Negotiations Director Moira Dolan.

Save jobs, tax the rich
DC 37 also lent decades of legal expertise to the consumer affairs workshop where, in a first, MELS attorneys Rashana Cain, Linda Keller, Jacqueline Pointdujour and Kaiesha Scarbrough teamed up with lawyers from the state Attorney General’s Office in a session moderated by Tessa Hackett-Vieira of MELS. The Westchester Black Women’s Political Caucus honored Oscar Alvarado of the DC 37 Political Action Dept. (see page 26).

U.S. Sens. Chuck Schumer and Kirsten Gillibrand, Comptroller Thomas DiNapoli, Attorney General Andrew Cuomo, City Comptroller William Thompson, and state legislators said they are united in the ongoing fight for New York’s fair share of federal stimulus monies.
“Our country achieved a $2.5 trillion surplus under Pres. Bill Clinton,” Paterson said. “Eight years later Pres. Bush left a $7.5 trillion deficit.”

With the collapse of the finance and auto industries and wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, Paterson and President Obama inherited America’s worst economy since the Great Depression. Paterson said he would have a balanced budget by April that reflects shared sacrifice and may include increased taxes for those who can best afford it. “Putting people back to work will get the economy going,” he said, “cutting taxes will not.”


David Paterson
Governor

 
Chuck Schumer
U.S. Senator
 
Bill Thompson
City Comptroller
 
Tom DiNapoli
State Comptroller

 

 


Andrew Cuomo
Attorney General

 

 

 

 
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