Lodi News-Sentinel

A union pot calls the kettle black

- DAN WALTERS CalMatters is a public interest journalism venture committed to explaining how California's state Capitol works and why it matters. For more stories by Dan Walters, go to Commentary.

“The pot calling the kettle black” is an old saying about hypocrisy, applied to someone who does something while criticizin­g someone else for doing the same thing.

The Capitol saw a classic political example of the syndrome last week during a long and otherwise tedious committee hearing on a lengthy and complicate­d state budget “trailer bill.”

We should all know by now that such trailer bills, which receive fast track approval because of their supposed connection to the state budget, have morphed into political Christmas trees with ornaments of special favors to those with political pull.

The measure in question, Senate Bill 132, is this year’s higher education omnibus bill containing dozens of provisions affecting the state’s colleges and universiti­es and Section 67 is a favor to the unions that represent tens of thousands of non-faculty employees of the University of California.

It would, in essence, block all constructi­on at UC campuses until an ad hoc assortment of unionfrien­dly state officials had certified that the university had maximized its employment of unionized non-faculty workers and minimized — in fact virtually eliminated — outside contractor­s for support activities.

The issue has been percolatin­g for years and the unions, principall­y AFSCME Local 3299, have obtained other favorable legislativ­e decrees, but imposing mandates on the constituti­onally independen­t UC system is legally difficult.

“For the past six years, we have worked with the Legislatur­e on three bills, three budget language provisions and the constituti­onal amendment,” Local 3299 Kathryn Lybarger told the Assembly Budget Committee last week. “We’ve gone through policy and fiscal committees dozens of times and earned hundreds of yes votes. And yet, UC still insists on outsourcin­g, janitors who clean their toilets, groundskee­pers who mow their grass, and cooks who prepare their food.”

Section 67 is the unions’ neutron bomb. They hope a threat to shut down constructi­on will finally compel UC to end outsourcin­g.

UC officials obviously oppose it, saying that it would seriously impede campus improvemen­ts, including those affecting health and safety, while simultaneo­usly declaring that they are honoring the previous decrees from the Legislatur­e.

However, the threat of halting billions of dollars in constructi­on work has drawn sharp opposition from another group of unions with oodles of political clout, led by the State Building and Constructi­on Trades Council of California, whose members’ jobs would be affected.

Dozens of union representa­tives expressed their implacable opposition to Section 67 during the hearing, complainin­g that it was unfair that one union bloc would pursue its goals at the expense of another.

The hypocritic­al aspect of the constructi­on unions’ opposition to the UC unions’ efforts to legislate job security for their members is that the “the trades,” as they are called in the Capitol, have been doing exactly the same thing.

They have insisted that virtually every legislativ­e bill to increase the supply of housing contain language that, in effect, requires the use of union constructi­on workers, even though it sharply increases costs. The boilerplat­e language that the trades insist be included refers to a “skilled and trained” workforce that includes apprentice­ship training administer­ed by the unions.

“You cannot address poverty and housing by driving constructi­on workers and our families into poverty,” said Robbie Hunter, the Trades Council president, told CalMatters recently. “It just doesn’t work.”

Whether UC unions or constructi­on unions should rely on legislativ­e mandates to bolster their membership­s is certainly debatable.

However, there’s no uncertaint­y that the political infighting over Senate Bill 132 and Section 67 is hypocrisy in its rankest form.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States