The State Worker blog of the Sacramento Bee carries a piece on what the political campaign against the anti-pension/anti-retiree health care initiative will likely look like. Excerpt:
Chuck Reed’s public-employee pension initiative is a long way from
making it to a statewide vote – money being the biggest hurdle – but
labor unions have already started blasting the proposal.
The San
Jose mayor’s measure would, among other things, change the California
Constitution to explicitly allow state and local governments in a fiscal
emergency to cut future retirement costs by lowering current employees’
benefits prospectively but leave accrued benefits untouched. Right now,
court rulings appear to give government workers an ironclad right to
the pension promised on their first day of work.
The unions say
that Reed’s proposal will speed government pensions down the same road
to near-oblivion that private-sector pensions have traveled. Here are
some ways they’ll fight it:
Kill it in the crib. Attorney General Kamala
Harris, a Democrat with strong union backing, assigns ballot measures’
titles and summaries. Last year she essentially killed efforts to put a
different pension initiative on the 2012 ballot with summary statements
that were “either provably false or grossly misleading,” the measure’s
proponents said at the time.That, in turn, waylaid raising the
$2 million or so for signature collection needed to put the proposal on
the ballot. Unions would love Reed’s measure to get the same treatment.
Remember the real audience.
Only a handful of people have checkbooks big enough and political
leanings strong enough to underwrite Reed’s campaign. Convince them it’s
a lost cause and the thing will never get off the ground. Pour money
into social media and maybe a traveling campaign of “real people” to
talk about how Reed’s measure would affect them. Make potential backers
think twice.
Hammer out-of-state money and Wall Street.
“Opponents want the guy with the big checkbook in Texas to be the face
of the measure,” said Dan Schnur of USC’s Jesse M. Unruh Institute of
Politics. He was referring to a Houston nonprofit with ties to a former
Enron executive that last summer gave $200,000 to the mayor’s hometown
chamber of commerce for pension reform research. Unions have blasted the
donation. Wall Street tycoons who brought down the economy make good
targets, too.
Talk up cops, firefighters and teachers.
Make them the victims of Reed’s proposal. ...
Organize...
Full story at http://www.sacbee.com/2013/10/24/5846884/the-unions-playbook-for-public.html
Missing from the strategy is one element UC can contribute: FACTS. There are major, major budgetary implications of the recently-filed proposition that would affect UC. That story needs to get out. There are fiscal implications for school districts, localities, and the state. Proponents think it's all about saving money. In fact, getting to full funding of pensions and retiree health in the period specified in the initiative, even if these programs are stripped down, could have major cost increasing impacts. That story needs to be told.
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