From Nancy Hamant, February 20, 2011
Subject: Fwd: Hey Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker, who wants to  trash collective bargaining,...your pants are on fire!
  
 As these "self-called conservative" Governors in Wisconsin, Ohio and  Michigan work to decimate laws protecting their middle-class citizens, one has  to wonder if each of these sanctimonious and arrogant governors told voters in  each of their states (prior to election) what they were intending to do once in  office?  
  
 It seems as if the governors are working in unison to destroy the  middle-class through their proposed legislation. It is clearly a shameful attack  on workers.  When will citizens see a similar attack on millionaires?  How about  changing the tax codes so that millionaires can't scam the system and pay no  taxes?  How about a uniform tax requiring every citizen to pay 10%, even the  wealthy that these governors are protecting?  Now that would be a reason to  rally at the State Houses! 
  
 Nancy Hamant 
 -----
   
 Says under his budget-repair bill, "collective bargaining is fully  intact." 
  
 Scott Walker on  Friday, February 18th, 2011 in a radio interview    
 Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker says his budget-repair  bill would leave collective bargaining “fully intact” 
  
 If Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker isn’t trying to strip most collective  bargaining rights from public employees, then why do workers keep pouring into  Madison by the thousands to demonstrate against him? 
  
 Many state, local government and public school employees -- including those  represented by the largest state workers union -- have said they would be  willing to pay more for pensions and health insurance, as called for in a  budget-repair bill introduced by Walker. 
  
 But the workers continue to protest provisions in the bill that would  restrict most public employee unions to bargaining only over wages, and then  only within caps. 
  
 It’s the central issue in the protests, which have drawn national  attention. 
  
 And yet on the morning of Feb. 18, 2011 -- a day after Democratic state  senators fled to Illinois to prevent a vote on the bill -- Walker made a  startling declaration in a Milwaukee radio interview. 
  
 At the turn of the 19th century, the Republican governor told conservative  talk show host Charles Sykes, Wisconsin adopted the "strongest civil service  protections" in the world. 
  
 Walker then added: 
  
 "Those fully remain intact. Civil service does not get altered by the  modest changes we’re talking about here. Collective bargaining is fully intact.  You’ve got merit hiring, you’ve got just cause for termination and for  discipline. All those things remain." 
  
 In the middle of that statement is the eyebrow-raising remark. 
  
 Collective bargaining would remain "fully intact"? 
  
 We immediately asked Walker spokesman Cullen Werwie for evidence that would  back up his boss’ statement. In the crush of activity in Madison, where the  state Assembly took up the budget-repair bill as Walker did the interview,  Werwie had not responded by publication time. 
  
 But let’s take a look at what was said. 
  
 In contending that collective bargaining would remain fully intact, Walker  mixed civil service protections with collective bargaining rights. 
  
 They are not the same. 
  
 Civil service protections 
  
 The protections are put into state law by the Legislature, or into a local  ordinance by a city council, or village or town board, said public-sector  employer attorney Andrew Phillips. He is general counsel for the Wisconsin  Counties Association and his Mequon firm also represents municipalities and  school districts. 
  
 Currently, state employees are covered by civil service, but most local  government employees don’t have it and no public school employees do, Phillips  said. 
  
 Phillips said civil service protections, among other things, specify  employee rights to things such as vacation and overtime; prohibit termination  for reasons other than just cause; and create procedures for employees to file  grievances and to have those complaints heard. 
  
 What they don’t provide, he said, is any right for employees to bargain  with their employers over those issues and others. The terms are set by the  employer. 
  
 Collective bargaining rights 
  
 Two sections of state law -- one for state workers and one for local  government and public school employees -- give public employees the right in  Wisconsin to collectively bargain. 
  
 The law issues a mandate to both the employer (the government) and the  collective bargaining unit (employees represented by a union). 
  
 The two sides must "meet and confer at reasonable times, in good faith,  with the intention of reaching an agreement" on wages, hours, fringe benefits  and conditions of employment. 
  
 In other words, the workers -- through their union -- have a say in those  areas. They do not have such a say under civil service rules. 
  
 So, what would change if Walker’s budget-repair bill is adopted by the  Republican-controlled Legislature? 
  
 With an amendment approved by the Joint Finance Committee, the bill would  require local governments that don’t have a civil service system to establish  one, according to an analysis by the nonpartisan Legislative Fiscal Bureau.  
  
 Alternatively, local governments could establish a grievance procedure that  would, at minimum, address employee discipline and workplace safety, and provide  for a grievance procedure for employee terminations. 
  
 Let’s return to Walker’s statement that under his changes collective  bargaining remains intact. 
  
 To be sure, those rights would remain intact for the State Patrol and local  police and fire department employees. They are exempt from any of the changes.  
  
 As for the rest of state, local government and public school employees,  Walker’s own Feb. 11, 2011 letter to employees about his plan cited "various  changes to limit collective bargaining" to the rate of base pay. 
  
 The letter also noted other changes, including limiting contracts to one  year and requiring annual employee votes to retain unions. 
  
 Moreover, the bill would repeal all bargaining rights for home health care  workers, University of Wisconsin System faculty and academic staff, and  employees of University of Wisconsin Hospitals and Clinics. 
  
 Indeed, Walker also said in the interview with Sykes it was necessary to  use his bill to strip collective bargaining rights because when it comes to  money the state is broke. He added: 
  
 "What changes is the fact that no longer can our unions have a stranglehold  -- not only on the state government but local government -- to force them to not  alter benefit packages that are like a virus eating up our budget." 
  
 Where does that leave us? 
  
 In arguing the changes would be modest, Walker cited the civil service  system and said "collective bargaining is fully in tact." However, Walker  himself has outlined how his budget-repair bill would limit the collective  bargaining rights of public employees. 
  
 Indeed, it’s that provision that provoked daily demonstrations at the state  Capitol and national media attention. To now say now say collective bargaining  would remain "fully intact" is not just false, it’s ridiculously false. 
  
 And that means it is Pants on Fire
     
    
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