(Hint: Act 10 works!)
Union helps write living wage ordinance that could cost
taxpayers millions
Watch Dog – Adam Tobias – 1/10/2014
By Adam Tobias | Wisconsin Reporter
MILWAUKEE, Wis. — Big Labor has helped a Milwaukee County Board
member write a union-boosting minimum wage proposal that could cost taxpayers
more than $27 million over the next six years.
The “living wage”
ordinance also could bankrupt the county’s Department of Family Care,
stunt job growth and hinder future development, according to a fiscal
analysis by the county’s nonpartisan comptroller’s office.
County Supervisor David
Bowen wrote the legislation in collaboration with the Service
Employees International Union.
Bowen, endorsed
by the SEIU Wisconsin State Council in his 2012 election, worked withlabor
union representatives on about 15 drafts and met with them several times
in his office at the county courthouse, County Supervisor
James “Luigi” Schmitt
confirmed.
“SEIU, they’ve been lockstep
with it,” Schmitt told Wisconsin
Reporter.
The proposed law would set a
living wage of $12.45 per hour for 350 county employees and hundreds of others
who work under contract with the county.
The proposal, however,
offers contracting firms an exemption from the wage hike, but only if their
workers are covered by a collective bargaining agreement between the employer
and a bona fide labor union.
“This is obviously an
attempt to strengthen unions that have pretty much gone to the wayside,”
Supervisor Steve Taylor said.
“It’s frustrating that, for their own self-interest, they are going to drive
jobs out of Milwaukee
County. They are more
focused on their own membership and their own power and strength than they are
to the average working people of the county.”
The living wage
ordinance also could remove close to $27.4 million from the tax levy
through 2019, according to a report by Milwaukee County Comptroller Scott
Manske.
Annual costs could reach
more than $8 million after 2017, the year when the Family Care program’s
reserves are expected to run out.
Expenses also will
continue to increase as contracts expire and the bidding for new agreements
requires compliance with the minimum wage ordinance.
Additionally, the
living-wage rate increases, on average, by about 2.5 percent every year.
If a developer chooses to
receive financial assistance of more than $1 million from the county, that
company and their site’s tenants also would be subject to the minimum wage
ordinance.
Manske said the county’s
minor role in economic development would then become “non-existent.”
That could lead to the
county losing out on an estimated $34.5 million in land sales, $11 million in
additional tax revenue and 8,700 new jobs.
“There is no free lunch,” said
Chris Edwards, director of tax policy studies at the Cato Institute. “Every
dollar of mandated increase in wage is a dollar coming out of somewhere else in
the economy. These politicians seem to think money grows on trees and it just
doesn’t. There’s no Santa Claus here. All of this has to be paid for.”
Santa would instead visit
the homes and offices of officials and members of an SEIU hit hard since Wisconsin in
2011 passed Act 10, Gov. Scott
Walker’s signature law that reformed collective bargaining for government
employees.
The Milwaukee
SEIU reported revenue of $1,878,513 in 2010, $938,478 in 2011 and $780,923 in
2012, according to IRS tax documents.
If all of the approximately
2,400 employees who work for the Family Care program’s Supportive
Home Care Employment Services were to join the SEIU, the union could see
hundreds of thousands of dollars in additional income every year.
And that’s just one piece of
the puzzle. The ordinance also includes contracted food, security, janitorial
and clerical services.
While Bowen says the goal is
to help Milwaukee
County residents move
above the federal poverty line, union dues and other contributions would cut
deeply into wage increases.
A vote on the living wage
law has been delayed until February, Bowen said.
Bowen is trying to get a
veto-proof majority of 12 votes to prevent County Executive
Chris Abele
from blocking the legislation.
“This mandate will cost
taxpayers millions of dollars, thousands of jobs and ultimately risk the
county’s important safety net services,” Abele said in a December memo to
supervisors.
Abele last summer vetoed a
development agreement with Hospitality Specialists Inc. on an $8 million
extended-stay hotel in Wauwatosa
because of a provision forcing the firm to provide starting wages of about $14
an hour.
Hospitality Specialists
co-owner Jim Mann told the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel the clause would have made the hotel
uncompetitive and killed the project.
Contact Adam Tobias at
atobias@watchdog.org or follow him on Twitter @Scoop_Tobias
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