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P ublication of the S tate E mployees A ssociation of N orth C arolina • M arch 2010 • V ol . 28 N o . 2 • C irculation 55,000
It’s Here …Time to Meet and Confer Congratulations, SEANC has a meeting with the governor’s office as a result of Gov. Bev Perdue’s Executive Order 45. “So what?” you might ask. Hasn’t SEANC (or a form of it) been meeting with the state’s leadership since 1947? What’s the big deal? The big deal is that for the first time we have been formally guaranteed an annual meeting with the governor’s office and quarterly meetings with the state personnel director. The big deal is that state employee groups whose membership is 20 percent or more of a given executive agency are granted quarterly access to the bosses at that agency. And we don’t just get to meet with them; they also have to report back to the governor’s office our areas of concern. The governor also formally encouraged the UNC system, community college system and the council of state agencies to participate in the executive order. This means that when state employees have ideas on how to more efficiently and cost-effectively deliver quality public services, we have a regularly scheduled appointment to present and discuss these ideas and more. To me, this order is like a check-up with your doctor. Many of us have good intentions to get a wellness exam, but we don’t do it because we have to make an appointment. This order is a wellness appointment for state government.
PHOTO BY TONI DAVIS
By Dana Cope, Executive Director
Pictured at the State Capitol are SEANC President Tony Smith, Gov. Bev Perdue and SEANC Executive Director Dana Cope.
This also means that you can no longer stand on the sidelines. Now is the time to recruit employees in your office, prison and work site who are not SEANC members and ask them to join the association. In particular ask the person who has been interested in joining SEANC, but never got around to signing up. And reading this, I know that you know exactly who you should ask to join. I’m talking about your friend at work that you loaned this paper to, the neighbor who stops you at the mailbox, the state employee at the
grocery store who is working his second job and asking you about raises, health benefits and what’s going on in Raleigh because you are a SEANC member. We must now maintain a minimum of 20 percent in each and every executive agency or we face the prospect of outsiders coming in to take over representation of state employees and retirees. Meaning, we have our work cut out for us. Now more than ever, your participation in SEANC is vital. We can no longer take for granted that we are the only representative of state employees. We must work together to increase our numbers, to ensure that we have the political strength to fairly represent all state employees – from the governor to the lowest-paid employee. It’s time for you to choose who you want to represent you because unions like the North Carolina Association of Educators, Teamsters and UE 150 all want to be the representative of state employees. Just because we’re the biggest now doesn’t mean that we’ll be the biggest in five years. It is time to ensure that the years of hard work which SEANC has put in on behalf of all state employees and retirees will continue and grow. To read Executive Order 45, go to www.seanc.org. dcope@seanc.org
Retirement Systems Board Seeks Higher State Contribution and COLA The Retirement Systems Board of Trustees met on Jan. 21 and unanimously approved a proposal for the Teachers’ and State Employees’ Retirement System presented by the Retirement Systems Association Roundtable – made up of SEANC, the North Carolina Association of Educators, the Retired Governmental Employees’ Association, the North Carolina Retired School Personnel and the North Carolina Association of School Administrators. The proposal, which now goes to the General Assembly for consideration, recommends an increase in the employer contribution to 6.71 percent and a costof-living adjustment (COLA) equal to the U.S. Consumer Price Index (CPI) of 2.7 percent. In order to increase the employer contribution to 6.71 percent, roughly $181 million from the General Assembly is necessary to keep the system fully funded. Any COLA will also have to be funded by the General Assembly, which may be difficult to pass this year as the state is still experiencing budget difficulties. SEANC Retirees Director Mitch Leonard spoke at the meeting about the importance of raising the employer contribution. “We’re going to have to work very closely together as we try not only in this coming session, but sessions in the future, to make sure that the General Assembly appropriates the funds that are needed,” he said. “Some think there is no problem; others think you can just invest your way out of the problem, and we all know neither is true.” Also in attendance at the meeting were SEANC District 10 member Sterling Primus and District 9 member Randy Sales, who both serve on the board. mbell@seanc.org
PHOTO BY TONI DAVIS
By Mary Adelaide Bell
SEANC District 10 member Sterling Primus, left, and District 9 member Randy Sales attend the Retirement Systems Board meeting on Jan. 21 in Raleigh.