David M. Stott, running for Onondaga County Legislature 4th District
1. A Project labor agreement is a comprehensive pre-hire collective bargaining agreement that establishes standardized conditions and wages for all contractors and subcontractors on a PLA covered project. PLAs offer:
Stable labor costs so
you can bid without guessing.
Reliable supply of local skilled workers for the project duration.
Apprenticeship trained and certified workers.
A no-strike, no lockout commitment.
Binding procedures to settle disputes, so no work stoppages.
Management flexibility to meet special project needs.
Do you support Project Labor Agreements? If not, explain why.
ANSWER: Yes, I do.
2. Private school
vouchers and other schemes like education tax credits for K-12 private school
expenses undermine public education by taking scarce public funds away from
public schools that are open to the public and shifting them to private schools.
The AFL-CIO strongly supports legislation that would strengthen public education
by helping states and local school districts reduce their class sizes and
finance school repair, construction, and modernization projects with protection
for prevailing community wages. A growing number of public schools all across
the country are being forced to set up classrooms in trailers, hallways, and
closets in order to accommodate their rapidly rising enrollments. One-third
of all public schools also need extensive repair or replacement.
What is your view of proposals to provide for private school vouchers and/or charter schools?
ANSWER: School vouchers and education tax credits for private schools destabilize the public school system. These are not viable programs in my opinion and I don’t support them.
What would you do to improve the state of disrepair many of our public schools are currently experiencing?
ANSWER: I would like to see the State of New York deliver on their promises to better fund our schools and stop widening the gap between what the State and local community provides. In the Liverpool School District the gap in State aid has increased from about two million to about twelve million dollars. I would request that the State increase funding to the school districts.
3.
Ninety-four percent of workers say firing an employee for supporting union
representation is an “unacceptable action” and 80 percent say they are aware
that such actions are against the law. Nevertheless, employers illegally fire
union supports in 31 percent of organizing campaigns and many use other tactics
to thwart workers’ efforts to form unions.
A recent report by Human Rights Watch shows that existing laws are too lax
and unenforced to prevent employer attacks on workers’ rights. For instance,
while employers can prevent unions from contacting workers at their work places
to discuss the advantages of union membership, they are free to deluge workers
with anti-union messages.
Do you believe employers should be held accountable for their anti-union activities?
ANSWER:Yes, I do.
If yes, what actions should be taken against companies that violate workers’ rights to organize?
ANSWER: This would have to be established ahead of time so there is a legal means to justify any actions taken. I would say that any government funded program that provides tax breaks or other such programs could be pulled if such an injustice occured.
How could labor laws be improved to guarantee workers’ right to organize?
ANSWER: I feel that working together with local labor leaders, we could formulate legislation that allowed the employer to run their business while keeping the workers best interest at heart. There needs to be clearly defined standards that are and are not acceptable regarding the right to organize.
4.
While the economy has been growing, this growth has been accompanied by a
sluggish job market that seems to provide too few with a rising standard of
living or greater economic security. Economists have attributed this unique
predicament to several factors, including corporate downsizing, global competition,
the introduction of labor saving technologies, and a pattern of increasingly
large rewards to more highly skilled employees. Indeed, a recent study found
that most Americans today are worse off than they were before the 1989-1991
recession.
Many northeast communities have lured businesses or encouraged them to stay
through tax incentives. However, these incentives have not prevented those
companies from downsizing the jobs of those very same taxpayers who offered
the tax breaks in the first place.
Should companies be able to accept such tax breaks only to downsize thereafter?
ANSWER: While we can predict possible downsizing, measures can be taken to pre-qualify and state that certain employment standards remain in place throughout the period of any tax benefit to the given company.
How would you correct this apparent inequity?
ANSWER: In short, there could be a rebate like penalty at the expense of the company for cutting back on the workforce in the form of a reduced if not eliminated tax break.
5.
An honest day’s work should be rewarded with an honest day’s pay. That’s what
a “Living Wage” is all about. Living wage ordinances have been enacted in
80 localities across the nation and have been passed in Rochester, Buffalo
and New York City.
A living wage ordinance requires employers to pay wages that are above federal
or state minimum wage levels. Only a specific set of workers are covered by
living wage ordinances, usually those employed by businesses that have a contract
with a city or county government or those who receive economic development
subsidies from the locality. The rationale behind the ordinances is that city
and county governments should not contract with or subsidize employers who
pay poverty-level wages.
The living wage level is usually the wage a full-time worker would need to
earn to support a family above the federal poverty line, ranging from 100%
to 130% of the poverty measurement. The wage rates specified by living wage
ordinances range from a low of $6.25 in Milwaukee to a high of $10.75 in San
Jose ( A wage of $8.96 an hour with health benefits is recommended for Syracuse,
NY.).
Living wage ordinances provide much needed raises for low-income workers.
Wages for the bottom 10% of wage earners fell by 9.3% between 1979 and 1999.
The number of jobs where wages were below what a worker would need to support
a family of four above the poverty line also grew between 1979 and 1999. In
1999, 26.8% of the workforce earned poverty-level wages, an increase from
23.7% in 1979.
Can you provide a good reason why you would not support legislation that requires a living wage for workers? Please include your position on a living wage for Syracuse-area workers.
ANSWER: I agree with a living wage.
6.
“Down-waging” has become a standard practice
by highly profitable companies who replace full-time workers with part-timers,
temps or sub-contract out for lower wages and poorer benefits. Between 1980
and 1995, 42-million jobs were lost in the United States. Each year, there
are 50 percent more people laid off than are victims of crime, which raises
the question of which is the greater social ill.
Reduced wages and benefits negatively impacts on families’ ability to afford
adequate health care. Forty-three million Americans do not have health insurance
and another million lose it each month.
And, while many parents believe college costs will be the biggest expense
they face for their children, in fact many will spend more in a year on quality
child care than on public college tuition, according to a new Children's Defense
Fund (CDF) report.
The AFL-CIO supports guaranteed high-quality child-care, health care, job education and training.
What steps can elected officials take to ensure that these benefits are available to all Americans?
ANSWER: This is extremely complicated but I would suggest working together with insurance companies to provide better and more affordable healthcare. In addition, we should hold hospitals and physicians accountable for fair cost of healthcare services. Increase the penalties for fraud on both sides of the healthcare issue and ultimately reduce the cost. Hold insurance companies accountable for the denials that seem to come regardless of the case as a method of exhausting the patient and frustrating them in to giving up.
7.
Those who advocate the privatization of government services seek a significant
reduction in the government’s role in society. But, market-oriented policies
cannot be relied on, by themselves, to meet our citizens needs.
Studies conducted by Cornell University found that the claims by privatization
ideologues, are “quite groundless” and the empirical research supporting such
claims are “so flawed as to be useless as a policy guide.”
Instead, privatization of government services has been shown to
•diminish the access to public services
•reduce employee morale, productivity and turnover
•exploit part-time workers through low wages and benefits
•increase discrimination against minorities
•cause the loss of government sovereignty
•weakens constitutional rights (e.g., whistle blowing, ethical conduct)
•reduce quality of services
•increase corruption, bribery and kick-backs
•lose accountability for public values and services.
Do you support privatizing public services? Please explain your answer.
ANSWER: Privatizing public services is a negative for the very reason stated above. There is also reduction in accountability; control over standards of service and the service would suffer whenever the bottom line was threatened.
8. As an elected official, how would you ensure that the voice of labor and community-based agencies are recognized on decision-making bodies such as the Industrial Development Authority?
ANSWER: I would like to see appointments of labor leaders to such bodies. The workforce needs to be represented when projects are presented as it ultimately comes down to people when we are talking about how any business is going to service the community.
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Greater Syracuse Labor Council Questionnaire