Feb reporter final

Page 1

THE

State Employees Association of North Carolina, SEIU Local 2008 1621 Midtown Place, Raleigh, NC • www.seanc.org 800-222-2758 • 919-833-6436 • Circulation 55,000

February 2014

Pay Raise is Priority No. 1

• Vol. 32, Issue 3 Get Social with SEANC!

Dear Members, The General Assembly doesn’t return to session until May, but SEANC is already working on much-needed pay raises for state employees and retirees in the halls of the legislature and speaking out in the media on your behalf. SEANC is advocating for a 3-percent across-the-board increase for state employees and retirees in this General Assembly session, which starts May 14. We believe that the state can afford it because in a $20 billion or more budget — it’s just a matter of priorities. Now that the economy is improving, state employees and retirees should share in North Carolina’s prosperity just as we sacrificed pay raises during the recession. SEANC isn’t being coy about our pay raise request. My team and I have been on TV, in newspapers and on the radio letting the public and lawmakers know that in 2014 a pay raise is our top priority. Cope While teacher pay has received much of the attention so far, SEANC is dedicated to ensuring that ALL state employees and retirees get more money in their paychecks. Public employee pay raises should never be a partisan, political issue. State wages have been stagnant for a half-decade, with just a meager 1.2 percent increase since 2008. During this time, prices on everything from food to housing to medicine have increased, along with premiums for the State Health Plan. Failing to increase pay for state employees actually costs taxpayers in the long run, since workers eventually decide to retire or leave state service for more pay. Not only does the state lose that employee’s years of expertise, it also has to hire someone else and pay to train that person. In 2012, our state had an 11 percent turnover in state government which cost taxpayers $282 million. Last year, Gov. Pat McCrory proposed a 1-percent pay increase for all state employees, but that raise didn’t make it into the General Assembly’s budget. At the time, legislators blamed a Medicaid deficit for taking the money needed to fund raises. That is a preposterous red herring that unfairly makes state employees and retirees bear the burden of poor leadership in the General Assembly. It’s time for the General Assembly to put raises on the table first, rather than fund them as an afterthought. North Carolina’s workers and retirees always put North Carolina first. We are the people who work in wintry weather while others sleep. We are walking the cell block guarding dangerous criminals and working in hospitals to help people in need. Make no mistake about it! It’s time for the General Assembly to put North Carolina’s state employees and retirees first!

Facebook

fb.me/SEANC.Local2008

Twitter

@SEANC2008

LinkedIn

linkd.in/1bs4fZT

YouTube

youtube.com/seancmedia

Sincerely,

Dana Cope, Executive Director

dcope@seanc.org; Twitter @DanaDCope

Pinterest pinterest.com/ seancseiu2008


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.