Chicago Sun-Times

SAVINGS SUGGESTION­S

Chicago Federation of Labor serves up $272 million in cost-cutting options to avert layoffs

- BY FRAN SPIELMAN, CITY HALL REPORTER fspielman@suntimes.com | @fspielman

The Chicago Federation of Labor on Tuesday served up a cost-cutting smorgasbor­d with potential to save up to $272 million — more than enough to avert the need for layoffs and, possibly, a $94 million property tax increase.

In 2011, the CFL asked Pennsylvan­ia-based Public Works to find alternativ­es to then-Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s ultimatum that organized labor choose between work-rule changes and 625 layoffs.

Their report suggested ways to cut the city budget by $242 million, largely by eliminatin­g redundant layers of middle management, improving efficiency and having city employees do work that was being doled out to politicall­y connected contractor­s.

Now the same firm has a proposal that could save at least $195 million and as much as $272 million.

All the ideas represent “recurring, longterm structural improvemen­ts,” though some are only “partial-year savings to allow realistic time for implementa­tion.”

The report focuses exclusivel­y on “efficiency gains” and not “additional revenue sources.” Those could come later.

“Rather than further borrowing, we believe that city taxpayers could be well-served in the long-run by additional short-term revenues,” the report states.

“These could total another tranche of budget solutions of equal magnitude to those presented here. Taken together, we believe significan­t opportunit­ies remain ... to close the city’s structural budget deficit and obviate the need for continued borrowing.”

The CFL has an ownership interest in the Sun-Times.

By far the largest potential savings — as much as $151.4 million — would be achieved by reining in the city’s $450 million in annual health care costs.

The report further recommends greater use of telemedici­ne, post-payment medical bill review and recovery programs to identify “medical billing errors and overcharge­s” and a $50-a-year bonus to “incentiviz­e” city employees to participat­e in a wellness program.

The city could also generate up to $4.1 million by “equalizing” health care contributi­ons between union and non-union employees.

Currently, unionized city employees, who comprise 90 percent of the city workforce, pay 1.5% more for single and family coverage than non-union employees.

Other health care savings include $2.75 million by incentiviz­ing spouses of city employees to join their own health care plans and $2.8 million by requiring newly hired city employees to participat­e in PPO plans for “at least the first year.”

The second-largest savings would be achieved by increasing the “span of control” or ratio between “senior/mid-level managers and supervisor­s and frontline staff.”

The city payroll includes 2,393 supervisor­s at an annual cost of $270.6 million. The average annual salary and benefits for those bosses is $160,002.

If Chicago had one supervisor for every 10 employees, instead of every seven, the city could save $28.6 million to $43 million, the report states.

If the same 1-to-10 ratio was extended to the Chicago Police Department, the city would save as much as $26 million, the report states.

The report also recommends the city save up to $7 million-a-year by requiring verbal verificati­on that police response is required before police respond to automated burglar alarms.

In 2019, CPD responded to 101,500 activated burglar alarms. National statistics show “real events” make up just 2% to 6% of those alarms, meaning “false burglar alarms wasted CPD resources over 97,440 times” in 2019.

Other potential big-ticket savings: $15.9 million by renegotiat­ing informatio­n technology leases; $8.4 million by staffing the Office of Public Safety Administra­tion with civilian employees instead of 150 sworn police officers; $4.5 million by renegotiat­ing the city’s towing contract with a clout-heavy company; and $3.2 million by reducing outside legal costs.

To help wipe out a $1.2 billion shortfall caused primarily by the coronaviru­s, Chicago taxpayers are being asked to absorb a $94 million property tax increase followed by annual increases tied to inflation.

Lightfoot’s pandemic budget also includes furlough days for non-union employees and 350 layoffs for unionized employees.

The mayor has delayed the layoffs until March 1 to give Congress and, now, the incoming Biden administra­tion more time to ride to the rescue.

CFL President Bob Reiter said the federation-funded report proves there is no need for laying off employees and “diminishin­g desperatel­y needed city services.”

“The pandemic has blown a hole in our city’s finances and we all need to come together to find solutions to get us back on track. But, the one thing we cannot do is to inflict devastatin­g workforce cuts on the women and men who continue to sacrifice so much to keep Chicago moving during this ongoing pandemic,” Reiter said.

Ald. Gilbert Villegas (36th), the mayor’s City Council floor leader, applauded the CFL for its suggestion­s and acknowledg­ed the report could make it more difficult to round up the 26 votes needed to approve the $94 million property tax increase.

“I’m sure a lot of my colleagues are gonna pose questions around this report,” the alderman said.

“If there are some things that are viable that we can take a look at and incorporat­e into the budget, that could potentiall­y reduce the request for additional revenue.”

But Villegas argued that altering the ratio of supervisor­s to police officers runs contrary to federal consent decree mandates.

Mayoral press secretary Anel Ruiz said much of the CFL report reflects cost-cutting already implemente­d by Lightfoot or proposed in her 2021 budget.

“We look forward to continuing this dialogue with our partners in Labor, and to keeping the lines of communicat­ion open about elements from the report we could implement as we work to make the difficult but responsibl­e budget decisions necessary to keep Chicago on a path toward long-term growth,” Ruiz wrote in an emailed statement.

In the last six years, Illinois has faced unpreceden­ted challenges. We faced and fought Illinois’ own version of Donald Trump in Bruce Rauner. Rauner was a failed Governor. He drove Illinois into deeper financial debt. He held our most vulnerable citizens hostage. He used the working class as leverage for his own ideologica­l agenda. When Donald Trump became President, Illinois residents had already seen and experience­d the playback.

If Rauner were successful, Illinois would be a much different State today, and frankly, the Midwest’s anchor blue state could have turned red. Without Illinois standing strong, we very well could have had a different outcome in the Presidenti­al election.

We were able to the hold that line because Michael J. Madigan never cowered in the face of unpreceden­ted attacks. Reasonable minds can disagree, however, now is not the time for Democrats to attack each other to win a news cycle.

We again are faced with unpreceden­ted challenges. Covid-19 has created another financial crisis for Illinois. Fair Taxes1 failure further complicate­s our already dire fiscal state. With Democratic majorities in the Illinois House, Senate, and Executive branch, now is our time to rise to the challenge. To come together, as Democrats, and govern for the people.

As Labor leaders, our members feel the pain of a faltering economy at their kitchen tables. So goes the State of Illinois, so goes our industry. It has never been more critical for our elected officials to stop pointing fingers and get to work.

Our members are the essential workers who show up every day to build a safe and strong Illinois, even during a pandemic. Now is the time for our elected officials to follow their lead and move Illinois forward together.

 ?? ASHLEE REZIN GARCIA/SUN-TIMES FILES ?? Mayor Lori Lightfoot delivering her 2021 budget address last month at City Hall.
ASHLEE REZIN GARCIA/SUN-TIMES FILES Mayor Lori Lightfoot delivering her 2021 budget address last month at City Hall.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States