Rebane's Ruminations
November 2011
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George Rebane

[This is the submitted form of my regular column in The Union which appears in its 12nov11 print and online editions (here) under its less harsh title 'Public service unions will be our demise', no doubt edited for a more sensitive readership than frequent these pages.]

Today socialist Europe is unraveling after years of ‘robbing Peter to pay Paul’ has finally hit a brick wall.  With riots in the streets, the Peters have run out of money and patience with a system of governance that simply does not work.  And what has caused the rot now toppling governments of countries that have essentially gone broke and live on borrowed money?  You need look no further than the trans-national common denominator – public service unions.

These unions have bloated governments to hire and retire workers in prodigious numbers.  In Greece, the current paragon of socialist corruption, more than one in four of the country’s workers are government employees being paid benefits that are out of reach in the private sector.  Well, the music has stopped and everyone there is scrambling for a safe seat.  Why? Because the lenders are refusing to throw more money into a fiscal cesspool from which there is little chance of payback.  Eurozone lenders say that there is less than one chance in ten that Greece will NOT go fiscally belly-up in the next twelve months.

But Greece is chump change when compared to Italy, Europe’s third largest economy on a headlong charge off the inevitable socialist cliff.  Maybe Greece can be bailed for a year – anything longer is not feasible.  There is no will left in Europe’s more fiscally prudent countries to rescue Greece.  It will simply have to quit the euro, and print itself into oblivion with drachmas.  But Italy is too big to bail and, for the sake of international stability, too big to fail.  The country’s sovereign debt is over $2,500,000,000,000 (that’s trillions), and they can’t print euros.


Next to bankrupt behind Italy are Spain, Portugal, Ireland, …, and even France, whose banks have been heavy lenders to both Italy and Greece.  And every one of the teetering Europeans has been put on a collision course with the iceberg by their respective public service unions that have organized their government employees into wards of the state – with recourse.  When pushed, these short workweek, long vacation, early retirement, large pension workers know they can shut down their country in a heartbeat.  They have done it before, and they’ll do it again.

Why does all this concern us?  Because we connect to Europe in more ways than we can count, and we are copying their mistakes at an extraordinary clip.  When public service unions appeared in America, our first socialist president FDR fought the idea, and wrote a prescient letter in 1937 about their collective bargaining powers, foretelling their disastrous impact on the country.  He was ignored.

Over the decades since WW2, the power and reach of public service unions have grown through their incestuous relationships with elected politicians who became their handmaidens and co-conspirators in bamboozling private sector taxpayers (to the extent we pay government employees their salaries, we also pay their taxes).  And so these cancerous unions grew until they metastasized through all levels of government, its agencies, bureaus, and schools.  Today the active military is still free of their influence, but don’t hold your breath.

The spread of this cancer in our public infrastructure has recently been detailed by Philip Howard, chairman of the non-partisan, non-profit Common Good (commongood.org).  It is a shocking tale of unions whose leaderships and members have bilked jurisdictions out of hundreds of millions, and run up unfunded liabilities into the hundreds of billions (California’s current obligation is over a half a trillion dollars).

The methods the unions have taught their members include ‘spiking’ salaries and going on disability just before retirement.  We actually pay for them to take college courses on how to game retirement benefits.  For example, 82% of senior CHP officers are ‘disabled’ in their last year of employment.  Union rules tie the hands of government and school administrators, and sky-rocket operating costs.  In the last ten years the LA school district succeeded in firing just five out of their 33,000 teachers at a cost of $3.5 million.  And such stories are the norm in thousands of agencies, bureaus, towns, and counties across the country.

In sum, today almost every busted government budget can be traced back to the excesses squeezed out by public service unions with the help of their toady elected politicians.  And as recent occupations and elections show, the European disease has now fully riddled our public sector, with its inevitable devastation soon to follow.  Philip Howard advises – “America should ban political contributions by public unions, by constitutional amendment if necessary. Government is supposed to serve the public, not public employees.   America must bulldoze the current system and start over. Only then can we balance budgets and restore competence, dignity and purpose to public service."

George Rebane is an entrepreneur and a retired systems scientist in Nevada County who regularly expands these and other themes on KVMR and Rebane’s Ruminations (www.georgerebane.com).

Posted in , ,

91 responses to “The (inter)national cancer of public service unions”

  1. bill tozer Avatar
    bill tozer

    “That resignation is expected later Saturday after the Chamber of Deputies approves economic reforms, which include increasing the retirement age starting in 2026 but do nothing to open up Italy’s inflexible labor market”–from AP this morning. Changes to retirement age coming in 15 years? Great Caesar’s Ghost! This is too radical by those heartless fiscal conservatives. Time to strike!!!!!!!!

    Like

  2. D. King Avatar
    D. King

    Here is a simple explanation of how it works by Andrew Klavan.
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=su4PwZCWUdg
    Whether agenda driven or driven by greed, here is a real world (small town) example of an out of control, corrupt government. Agendas and salaries are interchangeable.
    http://www.reuters.com/article/2010/09/22/us-california-payscandal-arrests-idUSTRE68K40N20100922

    Like

  3. D. King Avatar
    D. King

    SEIU picking pockets of families of disabled in Michigan
    Initiated in 2006 under then-Gov. Jennifer Granholm, D-Mich
    “If you’re a parent who accepts Medicaid payments from the State of Michigan to help support your mentally-disabled adult children, you qualify as a state employee for the purposes of the Service Employees International Union (SEIU). They can now claim and receive a portion of your Medicaid in the form of union dues.”
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=G4g9ILNUr_8

    Like

  4. Steve Frisch Avatar
    Steve Frisch

    So, I am sure all of you guys are supporting Governor Brown’s proposals to reform the public pension system as a good first step toward getting this problem under control, right?

    Like

  5. Mikey McD Avatar

    Great piece George! I would highlight the fact that teachers unions are largely responsible for America’s failed public education system. If only their was a students union to combat the ills of the teachers unions!
    It amazes me that progressives can’t (won’t) see the foreshadowing in the EU zone as the fate of the socialism they push for in the USA.
    I would argue that Woodrow Wilson was our first socialist president (see 1913’s Federal Reserve Act and 16th Amendment).

    Like

  6. D. King Avatar
    D. King

    This Governor Brown Steve?
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AIlzYD4tk78

    Like

  7. Steve Frisch Avatar
    Steve Frisch

    The average wage of a teacher in Nevada County is in the $65,000 range, just slightly above average median income. Combines teacher salaries fell $600 million in California last year. Admittedly benefits add about 20% to that number, but do we really think it is a salary issue? It is a content issue.
    http://www.sacbee.com/2011/01/26/995141/see-how-well-your-school-district.html?appSession=572515124291003

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  8. Steve Frisch Avatar
    Steve Frisch

    I was thinking more of this Brown, Mikey:
    http://www.mercurynews.com/news/ci_19289626

    Like

  9. Dixon Cruickshank Avatar
    Dixon Cruickshank

    Excellent piece George and so unfortunately true – just a little taste was Madison WI – we are Greece already

    Like

  10. Mike Thornton Avatar

    Talking about “cancerous”, I’d like to know (yes or no) does the “Gang of 8” support these type of tactics?
    http://motherjones.com/mojo/2011/11/conservative-sabotage-recall-walker-wisconsin#update1

    Like

  11. Greg Goodknight Avatar
    Greg Goodknight

    “So, I am sure all of you guys are supporting Governor Brown’s proposals to reform the public pension system as a good first step toward getting this problem under control, right?”
    Let’s see… the unfunded liability for public pensions in California is about a half a trillion dollars. Jerry Brown’s reform plan is said by his office to represent a 5 to 10 billion saving over the next 30 years.
    Where does the other ~490 or 495 billion come from, Steve? Brown tries to limit the savings to giving future state workers a comparatively stingy pension deal so as to not anger current employees and retirees, but it’s the current unfunded liabilities that are leading the state towards receivership.

    Like

  12. Todd Juvinall Avatar
    Todd Juvinall

    If Jerry Brown was truly serious about pension reform we would all be fine supporting that attempt. However, when someone beats you over the head all the time then tells you he will stop do you think folks will believe him? Action not words, SBC is words, Dan Logue and Tom McClintock are action and they have yet to agree Brown is not just pulling our leg.

    Like

  13. Mike Thornton Avatar

    Once again, the “regressives” prove that they love corruption and illegal behavior as long as they benefit by it!

    Like

  14. Todd Juvinall Avatar
    Todd Juvinall

    I like that “gang of eight”. Kind of catchy.

    Like

  15. D. King Avatar
    D. King

    Yeah Todd, kinda old westy sounding.
    Here: Our new theme song.
    How the west was won!
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GZ7ZMS_QM2g
    LOL!
    Thanks Thornton.

    Like

  16. Greg Goodknight Avatar
    Greg Goodknight

    Thornton, rather than searching the web for words to stick on folks here, try to concentrate on what is actually being written here. Frisch, that goes for you, too.
    Do you think Brown’s proposal to slash 1% from the existing unfunded liability of public pensions is a serious attempt at solving the problem, or is it just as far as he can go without angering his base, who are the public employees who expect this largess?

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  17. Todd Juvinall Avatar
    Todd Juvinall

    Dave, I have always loved that music! The “Gang of Eight”! How the West was won! Yep, thanks Thornton!
    What we on the right like to see about these issues such as the pensions is ACTION! But, since the left and their water carriers, the public employee unions, want to mute the opposition by feigning doing something, I doubt we will see any ACTION!

    Like

  18. D. King Avatar
    D. King

    Think it’s like Greg said. They’ll save on stamps or something, over 30 years.

    Like

  19. Greg Goodknight Avatar
    Greg Goodknight

    Perhaps Thornton or Frisch will actually chime in with their own analysis of the problem versus the size of Brown’s solution. Perhaps not.
    Personally, I’ve never thought Union choices to screw new members in order to keep present brothers and sisters from sharing the sacrifice was anything other than a repudiation of most everything unions used to stand for. At least in the private sector, unions know that if they’re too greedy, everyone will lose when the company fails; public unions think there’s no way a state can fail, taxes can always be raised, others can sacrifice. That’s a big bet for California public employee unions to place.

    Like

  20. Bob W Avatar
    Bob W

    I cringe when thinking what else old Thornton must be looking up on the Internet.

    Like

  21. Greg Goodknight Avatar
    Greg Goodknight

    Let it get lost, this is what Frisch wrote: “So, I am sure all of you guys are supporting Governor Brown’s proposals to reform the public pension system as a good first step toward getting this problem under control, right?”
    Does Frisch really think a 1 or even a 2% cut is a “good first step”? Come on, Steve (BA Polisci, Cal State), give this a try.

    Like

  22. Bob W Avatar
    Bob W

    It is a great first step. It gives Brown all he needs to claim he is concerned and is doing what needs to be done while enabling him to point fingers at the other side. Great smoke screen. Let’s all give him a hand!

    Like

  23. Russ Steele Avatar

    Once again Mike T is trying to change he subject after checking his intellectual quiver and finding it empty.

    Like

  24. Todd Juvinall Avatar
    Todd Juvinall

    That was good Russ. What a hoot!

    Like

  25. Bob W Avatar
    Bob W

    Thank you Russ for helping blur the unattractive visions of Mike T’s influence with entertaining levity.

    Like

  26. Mikey McD Avatar

    Gov Wilson had solved the pension crisis years ago… then Gov Davis reversed Wilson’s two tier system… now we are to believe that Moonbeam has the guts, $ and wherewithal to combat the public service unions?! I commend Moonbeam and I consider it a small victory that Moonbeam admits that the $500,000,000 + in unfunded liabilities is a problem (crisis).

    Like

  27. Mikey McD Avatar

    It is comical that the lefties brought up the pension reform to get points for Moonbeam, while highlighting the facts outlined so well by Rebane that reform/solutions are made impossible by too powerful public employee unions. Finally, we all agree.
    See Arnold’s pension commission (6 dems, 6 rinos)… their summary (paraphrase) “Public employee unions are too powerful, there is nothing we can do to solve the unfunded liability crisis.”
    It should be noted that common sense solutions (see Gov Wilson’s two tier system) did (do?) exist… switching to a 401k style plan for new hires, raise retirement age, etc… though the public employee fat cat elitists would never go for it…

    Like

  28. Greg Goodknight Avatar
    Greg Goodknight

    Mikey, just in case you’d forgotten, Jerry Brown version 1 is the Governor who gave public employee unions collective bargaining for compensation in the first place.
    Were we to believe the movies, a future old Vulcan proverb is that “Only Nixon could go to China”. A Jerry Brown, Statesman, could fix the problem, but I can’t see anything in his past that points in that direction. In fact it was his lack of ability to do anything meaningful at the state level to solve out of control property tax levies that brought in the flawed Prop 13 over his objections.

    Like

  29. Steve Frisch Avatar
    Steve Frisch

    George, I just worked 45 minutes on a 11 point detailed reply and lost all the content, any chance of recovery?

    Like

  30. George Rebane Avatar

    SteveF – that’s a bummer, I’m sorry. It didn’t come through to me as an unpublished comment in the two places that it might have. This also happened to me early in blogging when I used the comment box as the text editor to capture stuff off the top of my head. I then learned never to compose anything lengthy in the box, and have advised readers to use their favorite non-browser text editor like MS Word to compose their thoughts, then paste them into the comment box. That way you are in control until you see it posted.
    I hope you give it another shot.

    Like

  31. Todd Juvinall Avatar
    Todd Juvinall

    God does answer our prayers! LOL!

    Like

  32. Steve Frisch Avatar
    Steve Frisch

    I’ll give it another shot late tonight after dinner and dancing 🙂

    Like

  33. Russ Steele Avatar

    Steven,
    The Typepad comment web page has a time out function. Typing text does not tell the timer you are still there. So, as George suggested, use a text editor and paste the text in on long posts. One caution, if there is a space as the first letter of the pasted text it will not accept the text as a post.. If the post button is faded after the paste, then check for a space as the first character. One other hint, before you paste, hit the browser refresh button to wake up the Typepad timer. All of these tips will make your live less stressful.

    Like

  34. Walt Avatar
    Walt

    So they voted down the so called anti union bill.
    So NOW who will the public unions whine to when the layoffs
    start coming? They NEVER think about that. Raise taxes to keep union people employed? Not going to happen. Only here in Ca. will that happen.

    Like

  35. Greg Goodknight Avatar
    Greg Goodknight

    Some folks confuse quantity with quality. One well supported point devoid of personal attack would be a breath of fresh air from any of the usual suspects.

    Like

  36. Steve Frisch Avatar
    Steve Frisch

    Gee Greg, you asked a question, and an important one. I regret that I can’t answer a complex public policy issue with a pithy one line response. Perhaps we should acknowledge the limits of blogging and bloggers attention spans when we discuss these issues.

    Like

  37. Steve Frisch Avatar
    Steve Frisch

    Russ and George, thanks for your helpful advice.

    Like

  38. Greg Goodknight Avatar
    Greg Goodknight

    Gee Steve, I thought you’d know the difference between making one good point supported by facts and reasonable logic and coughing up a “pithy one line response”. I’d be more impressed by one good limited post that actually took a 45 minute eternity to research and write than 11 points averaging about 4 minutes per… one minute of research and 3 minutes writing. Not much there there.
    My expectation is that your “eleven point response” was more dodging and obfuscation; what a shame it was lost to the four winds.

    Like

  39. Scott Obermuller Avatar

    Thanks for the topic, George. As a retired state employee, I find myself hit from all sides on this issue. When I entered state service, I was happy to be rid of unions but they seem to have followed me and sensing their new opportunities, they pounced on the naive state workers with all of their charm. The original union vote was to allow the unions to represent the workers but they promised they would never make any state worker have to pay any dues of any kind. I told every one of my fellow workers this was a lie and they would soon be paying money to the unions out of their pocket like it or not. I was hauled into my manager’s office and was told I could not keep saying this or I would be written up and disciplined. Since I could not prove in court what I was telling my fellow workers, I had to shut up. So much for free speech. The unions won and within a year, ‘fair share fees’ were being deducted from our paychecks. SEIU is a criminal organization that uses every form of censorship, lying and deception to further their quest for power. Anyone who defends SEIU is a fellow criminal, or is just too ill-informed to know what the hell is going on. That is not name calling any more than calling Bernie Madoff a crook. It is what it is. If you don’t like that characterization of SEIU, I would suggest you produce something factual to prove your point. I can (and will, if necessary) provide details of years of their gangster mentality in wanting total control over state workers and the sad way they treated us. We were never served by the unions. We became conduits for cash to the Dems in California and beyond. Nothing more.

    Like

  40. D. King Avatar
    D. King

    Typepad, that’s the name of my dog, ate my post.
    Here Telepad…here boy.
    I have found also Russ / Steve, that hitting “Enter” at the end of the post will darken the post tab at the bottom.

    Like

  41. Walt Avatar
    Walt

    Thanks Scott for sharing that story from the inside
    of union goonsmanship.
    The Mrs. had similar experience working as a elder care worker.
    She refused to join “that” union, and they said ” that’s fine. But we are taking our cut of your paycheck anyway”. She soon found another employer that was non union, with better pay and benefits, then gave the “union” the finger as she walked out the door.

    Like

  42. Bonnie M Avatar
    Bonnie M

    George…Thank you for the wonderful article. You pretty much covered everything. It’s reality. I thought most intelligent people could understand that when government got too big it would create a terrible burden for the private sector to support. When public servants unionized it simply created a government within our government of, by and for itself with the power to shut it down if it didn’t get it’s way…pretty much how President Roosevelt put it. Because of those like you George, and honest media like the Union, showing the fundamental costs responsible for our government’s financial woes…there’s a good chance for a solution. I’m weary of politicians using the poor, sick, elderly and kids as an excuse for their big spending. The budget cuts need to start at the top with those within the aristocracy.

    Like

  43. Bonnie M Avatar
    Bonnie M

    I also want to thank all those who posted such wonderful links contributing to the discussion.

    Like

  44. bill tozer Avatar
    bill tozer

    Greece and Italy can oust their PMs, but their Presidents remain. Today, everybody got excited cause they say they are going to do something. Nothing in concrete. Watch them try reducing something, try making the poor slacker pay 2-3% more for gov’t services or working 40 hours a week and you will see rioting in the streets. Politicians hate seeing burning of cars and businesses and they really hate people chanting disparaging no-nos at them. So, fire another PM, form another coalition government and watch nothing happen. You gotta be brain dead to burn perfectly good money by “loaning” (lol) Greece its 6th installment of money. Oh, Italy and Greece act real nice and promise to be good little boys and not masturbate in public when the Big Boys threaten to cut off their allowance. The promises and rhetoric that this time they truly mean it and will make cuts and maybe live within their means in a couple of decades ….but in the meantime, let the good times roll. Nothing like having your credit limit increased to make all those silly promises of responsibility become a distant memory. So, what do you do when a Greek or Italian nose goes on strike? You pick it, of course.

    Like

  45. bill tozer Avatar
    bill tozer

    Me again. I was curious as to why Slovakia was opposed to bailing out Greece not too long ago. Seems the people are very hard working, honest, frugal and work till they are 70. Their tourist industry is expanding as more shutter bugs as well as the National Geographic rave about this tiny country. It is understandable for a people who believe in hard work might feel resentment to those who have a socialist and entitlement bend. After all, Slovakia had its fill of Soviet style communism with its proximity to Hungary and Poland. Guess they don’t like slackers either, so I feel a kinship to the Slovenians. http://spectator.sme.sk/articles/view/44460/10/industrial_output_in_slovakia_grew_74_percent_y_o_y_in_september.html

    Like

  46. D. King Avatar
    D. King

    Here is an interesting read on the state of California.
    http://www.calwatchdog.com/2011/11/10/calpers-boosting-predatory-hedge-funds/

    Like

  47. bill tozer Avatar
    bill tozer

    Something has to give. Guess everyone is hoping for the good times of bubbles to return quickly so we can forget this austerity stuff. But bubbles burst and leave a sour taste in the mouths of the unsuspecting. I can site anecdotal stories for hours about unions, public pensions, national debts, deficit spending, etc.. Sure, there are countless signs of hope among countless stories of impending doom. Human nature, though, is predicable. When times are good, people believe it will always be that way. When times are bad, people believe it is worse than it actually is. Found this anecdotal opinion piece about Italy from Australia’s former Ambassador to Italy. I always like Ambassador since her dog bit a member of the Pakistani delegation, lol. http://www.theage.com.au/opinion/politics/the-drivers-of-italys-problem-20111113-1ndmq.html

    Like

  48. Greg Goodknight Avatar
    Greg Goodknight

    It looks like Steve Frisch is still out dancing, or perhaps he’s still trying to figure out how a 1% cut of a 500 billion dollar problem can be rationally sold as a “good start” to people who have actually read what’s in Brown’s proposals.
    I’d love for California to dodge bankruptcy but it can’t if partisans like Frisch and Thornton willfully keep their heads in the sand.

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