The Day

Detroit bankruptcy means another setback for unions

- By SAM HANANEL

Washington — Detroit’s historic bankruptcy filing is a major setback for public employee unions that have spent years trying to ward off cuts to the pensions of millions of government workers around the country.

If the city’s gambit succeeds, it could jeopardize an important bargaining tool for unions, which often have deferred higher wages in favor of more generous pensions and health benefits.

It also could embolden other financiall­y troubled cities dealing with pension shortfalls to consider bankruptcy, or at least take a harder line with their unions in negotiatin­g cuts.

“This is essentiall­y the union’s worst nightmare, said Gary Chaison, professor of industrial relations at Clark University in Worcester, Mass. “It means that the most sacred of sacred things they’ve negotiated for, the pensions of their retired members, are going to be severely cut.”

Detroit’s bankruptcy filing comes on the heels of some public unions losing most of their collective bargaining rights in Wisconsin. At the same time, the unions have shed thousands of members as state and local government­s shrink public payrolls. The crisis of underfunde­d public pensions could further erode union clout.

From Chicago to Cincinnati to Santa Fe, N.M., dozens of cities and counties are struggling with massive debt linked to pension liabilitie­s. Critics say state and city employees won generous defined benefit pensions and lifetime health care from elected officials trying to curry favor with public sector unions.

Unlike private employers that must fund such defined benefit pensions under the Employee Retirement Security Act, government employers are not covered by that statute. As a result, many elected officials approved such plans, leaving the financial consequenc­es for future leaders to handle.

If cities such as Detroit can use bankruptcy or other tactics to reduce pension obligation­s, government employees could become less interested in union membership, said Charles Craver, a George Washington University law professor specializi­ng in labor relations. That would be another dose of bad news for the steadily shrinking labor movement, especially because public employees now make up over half of all union members.

“Union leaders should go to the bargaining table and try to address this issue through negotiatio­ns, but they fear being thrown out of office if they agree to any cutbacks,” Craver said, referring to pensions.

Detroit’s financial woes were aggravated by widespread corruption, financial mismanagem­ent, the auto industry collapse and a dramatical­ly shrunken tax base as people moved out. The city has long- term debts of at least $18 billion, including $3.5 billion in unfunded pensions and $ 5.7 billion in underfunde­d health benefits for about 21,000 retired workers. The rest is owed to bondholder­s and other unsecured creditors.

About 7.3 million government workers belong to a union. The union membership rate for public sector workers is about 40 percent, much higher than the 6.6 percent rate in the private sector.

The fallout from Detroit could lead to more acrimoniou­s contract negotiatio­ns between cities and union, said John Beck, a professor of labor relations at Michigan State University.

“If I’m a union and bargaining, where I used to be willing to deferwages in form of pensions, I’m going to bargain for what I can get right now because I can’t be sure whether those future wages are going to be protected,” Beck said.

Unions, led by the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, have launched a furious legal challenge to the Detroit’s bankruptcy petition, arguing that Michigan’s constituti­on does not allow public pension obligation­s to be diminished. But a federal bankruptcy judge dealt a blow to that last week, halting any state lawsuits that would interfere with the proceeding.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States