Posted on 02/28/2014 6:21:30 AM PST by SoFloFreeper
A group of Miami police officers marched into Thursday's city commission meeting ready to fight over what they call "unjust cuts."
(Excerpt) Read more at m.local10.com ...
Now they are mad...blaming the mayor....
Just a reminder, fellas....the mayor cannot print moneylike the Clown.
I hope Dexter is pissed at Barkey.
From the picture at the linked site, it’s clear that one of the benefits NOT cut from these police officers is access to a steady supply of donuts.
Look for asset seizures to increase ‘unexpectedly’.
(Oh, wait, That's the firefighters,,,,)
I think they are justified in their demands. Just think of all the Labrador Retrievers and Basset Hounds they have to confront and shoot on a yearly basis.
Weese gots r boy Barack. How cum r pay b slippin ..?
Article posted: 3/2/2014 6:47 AM
Shift in unions raises questions about future
By
MUNCIE, Ind. Once a mighty labor union town, Muncie now has more police officers and office workers in organized labor than welders and auto workers.
With the closing of Muncies last two big auto industry plants and union strongholds now several years back in the rear view mirror, can Muncie ever recover its footing as a labor-friendly town?
And should it?
New figures released by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics show that union membership is half what it was a generation ago. And much of the modern-day organized labor force can be found in government jobs and not in the private sector.
Mike Jones, a former official for United Auto Workers Local 499 which represented workers at Chevrolet and its successors said a lot has been lost locally with the loss of unions.
With labor unions, workers have the right to earn a higher wage rate and a better benefits package, Jones told The Star Press (http://tspne.ws/1ms9kHc ). As a result, the workers would spend more available money than the current workforce has to dispose of. That keeps restaurants open and retail outlets open and cars selling and the whole nine yards.
When higher-paying jobs are present, it raises the local economy, Jones added. A rising tide lifts all boats.
But Michael Hicks, a Ball State University economist, said that while organizations representing the interests of workers in the workplace are a good thing, the one size fits all approach of labor unions was counter-productive.
Private sector labor unions have been failing at a remarkable rate, Hicks said. At a time when manufacturing employment is strong or stabilized, their membership is plummeting.
Union membership in 2013 was about 11.3 percent of the U.S. workforce, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Thats unchanged since 2012. So is the number of workers who belong to unions: 14.5 million.
But union membership is much smaller than it once was. In 1983, when the government began keeping track, union membership was 20.1 percent of the workforce and 17.7 million people were union workers.
The flip-flop in whos part of a union is dramatic. Public-sector workers, like those in government jobs, had a union membership rate of 35 percent compared to 6.7 percent for private-sector workers...
Read: http://www.dailyherald.com/article/20140302/news/140309914/print/
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