Posted on 06/12/2002 7:12:41 PM PDT by jern
By APRIL BETHEA, STAFF WRITER
Hundreds of state employees gathered at the Legislative Building Wednesday afternoon to let legislators know that they are fed up with pay, layoffs, and reductions in their health benefits.
The gathering was sponsored by the State Employees Association of North Carolina, a statewide organization that represents 60,000 active and retired state employees.
State employees have faced a multitude of challenges this year. Roughly 1,400 employees received notices May 31 that they their jobs may be in jeopardy. Some employees and retirees have run into trouble getting prescriptions because of a dispute in the state's health plan. And neither Gov. Mike Easley or Senate budget writers are recommending pay raises this year for state workers.
"Don't tell us there's no money left. Tell us the truth," Sherry Melton, a spokeswoman for the association, told the crowd. "Tell us that there's no money left because you've spent money on everything except the state's most valuable resource: its human resource."
Melton said about 1,800 people had brought tickets to the lunch that was part of the day's rally.
Meanwhile, teachers and state workers face the prospects of more disruptions at local pharmacies because of a showdown between the state health plan, its prescription plan manager and drugstores.
Eckerd Drug Stores said Wednesday it will no longer accept the state prescription plan after July 1 if the plan does not begin paying higher rates. Last week, CVS drugs said it would do the same.
SEANC Executive Director Dana Cope urged workers to boycott the two drug giants.
"This is all about corporate profits," Cope said.
Other speakers highlighted the importance of state employees for the future of North Carolina.
Harry Payne, chairman of the Employment Security Commission, said state employees should not be treated as "bureaucrats."
"We are not a bureaucracy," said Payne, who served formerly as state labor commissioner."We are not waste. We are not fat. We are people who donate out hearts, minds and souls to doing what is asked of us."
During the rally, protesters carried various signs reading, "An investment in state employees is an investment in N.C.'s future" and "Cut perks, not people."
Other forms of protest were more subtle. Attendees who had recently been laid off from their jobs wore black arm bands. Others, who said they work more than one job to help pay their expenses, wore orange ribbons. Many of the protesters took a vacation day from their jobs to attend the rally, including Susan Strickland, an office assistant at the East Carolina University Brody School of Medicine.
Strickland is a single mother of two daughters, including one who has a learning disability.
Strickland said she sometimes has to choose between buying prescriptions for herself and her daughters over other expenses, such as groceries.
"It's so much to figure out how we're going to make it," Strickland said. "It's not just about survival. We want to live."
Staff writer Jean Fisher contributed to this report.
Staff writer April Bethea can be reached at 829-8950 abethea@newsobserver.com
Excellent!
Man, I am sick of government parasites getting more benefits than regular productive citizens.
LOL!!!
This guy sounds like he is trying to convince himself, hahahaha...!
Strickland said she sometimes has to choose between buying prescriptions for herself and her daughters over other expenses, such as groceries.
Haha... Yeah, sure. Strickland is a liar.
"It's so much to figure out how we're going to make it," Strickland said. "It's not just about survival. We want to live."
Huh....? Like I said, a rocket scientist...
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A bureaucracy's purpose is to expand, not to provide a service or solve a problem(then they wouldn't be needed). There a lots of good people in government, but they tend to be low risk takers, and, hey, look at the benefit package and job security.
Wonder how many of the protesters were on the clock. Wonder how many Carolina citizens had to wait in line a little longer until their bureaucrats were late getting back from lunch.
State employees, not surprisingly, have been - along with teachers - the main constituency for tax-and-spend policies in this state. In a state with few workers unionized in the private sector, the NEA affiliate - and the state employees association - are the only "organized labor" with a cadre organization in every county.
Worst of all for the liberals in Raleigh, the state employees angrily chanted "Vote them out!" today - and openly referred to the governor mainly using the state chopper to ride back and forth to his home at the beach, and the high raises to state-university bureaucrats while the state supposedly is in so much of a budget crunch that state workers get no raises.
Hehehe....no raises for teachers and state employees in an election year.....
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