Stamford Advocate

State senator says he was snubbed by union

- By Kaitlyn Krasselt and Ken Dixon

When is an invitation to talk with rank-and-file union members not an invitation?

State Sen. George Logan says it happened last weekend when he attended an Service Employees Internatio­nal Union District 1199 candidates’ event at the request of a member of the health care workers union, where the first-term Republican expected to make his election pitch.

But when he got there, Logan was barred from speaking with the workers gathered in a Hamden union hall. On Tuesday, Logan charged the union was biased against Republican­s.

Union officials said he had not filled out a questionna­ire on his political philosophy. Logan says he could have written it while waiting for several Democrats, including those seeking to challenge his incumbency, to take their turns in front of SEIU members.

Logan, whose district includes Ansonia, Beacon Falls, Bethany, Derby, Hamden, Naugatuck and Woodbridge, said one of the SEIU members invited him two or three weeks earlier for the meet-thecandida­tes event.

“I get invited to meet with many groups and have never experience­d anything like that before,” he said. “It became clear to me that there was no desire to speak with me.

“I don’t serve any particular party. I am here to help my district and the state of Connecticu­t. I was more than willing to take all the hard questions.”

Union President David Pickus said the other candidates at the meeting had completed the questionna­ire and scheduled appearance­s.

“All candidates whether Republican or Democrat are required to fill out a questionna­ire before attending a member interview,” he said in a statement. “When Sen. Logan completes the questionna­ire, we look forward to having him meet with our members at a scheduled time.”

State Republican Party Chairman J.R. Romano, in a statement, said union officials and Democrats are working in tandem to keep other messages from reaching the rankand-file. “By silencing Republican­s, Democrats and union leaders are doing what they always do, trying to protect state employees’ wildly unaf- fordable benefits, even when it means union members outside of state government are the ones who suffer as a result,” Romano said.

Murphy seeking insurance protection­s

Sen. Chris Murphy is working to protect people with pre-existing conditions after the Trump administra­tion last week said it supports challenger­s in a Supreme Court case that would repeal key components of the Affordable Care Act that protects people with such conditions.

Murphy blamed President Donald Trump and Congressio­nal Republican­s for rising insurance rates. The Republican budget passed last year and signed by the president repealed the penalty for the people who fail to carry health insurance.

“Insurers are beginning to file their rate increases for the coming year and the increases that have been announced thus far are absolutely catastroph­ic,” Murphy said at a news conference Monday in Hartford where he was joined by individual­s and advocates for people with pre-existing conditions. He saidinsure­rs are padding their rates in anticipati­on of healthy individual­s opting to forgo health insurance because they will no longer be penalized.

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