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https:/.../15569261_1300357979987008_8153032192025427968_n.mp4?efg=eyJybHIiOjE1MDAsInJsYSI6MzMwOSwidmVuY29kZV90YWciOiJzdmVfaGQifQ%3D%3D&rl=1500&vabr=343&oh=0432c103fcd8124ea8d145f74f76bbbb&oe=58509267

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    AFSCME got a big win in court this week
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    as they were granted a temporary restraining order
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    that would prevent Governor Rauner from imposing his final demands
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    on the union and we're gonna see
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    where things go from here.
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    Joining us now is Anders Lindall Communications Director with AFSCME Council 31,
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    Anders thank you for being here I'm glad to join ya.
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    The state labor board finalized its ruling this week
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    that the two sides are at an impasse
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    but AFSCME is fighting that really tell us why.
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    So the labor board actually threw out the recommendations
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    of the administrative law judge who spent two months
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    looking at the facts in this case
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    that judge said that there was no impasse
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    on big issues like healthcare and wages
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    that judge said that the Rauner administration
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    had broken the law by failing to bargain
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    in good faith and to give us information
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    we needed to develop our own proposals
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    and that judge recommended that the Rauner administration
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    be ordered back to the table
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    we're the ones who want to negotiate
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    its Governor Rauner who walked away back in January
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    and has refused to even meet with our bargaining committee
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    of rank and file state employees for nearly a year
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    the labor board which is appointed by the governor
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    threw out those recommendations
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    and said no the governor should get the unilateral
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    power just to impose his demands
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    like 4 years with no pay increase.
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    Like a 100 percent hike in what employees
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    have to pay just to keep their health care.
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    The net effect of those two together,
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    a pay freeze and doubling health costs
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    that's a $10,000 pay cut out of the pockets of the average state worker.
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    The governor has gone ahead to try to
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    impose those changes before he could legally do so.
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    So we went to the circuit court
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    and said look this is a violation of the law
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    and the judge agreed and granted a temporary
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    restraining order it's a temporary victory
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    that keeps the status quo in place
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    and really the way to resolve this litigation
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    the way to resolve the threat of a disruptive strike
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    in which nobody wins is for the governor to come back to negotiate.
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    If there's truly been negotiating for almost a year now
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    it sounds like the two sides are are nowhere
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    close to an agreement right now
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    why aren't the two sides at an impasse
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    why wouldn't you called an impasse.
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    So one party can't try to force an impasse
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    by just refusing to be at the table now
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    unfortunately it's a tactic that's all too familiar
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    I think to observers of the state budget impasse.
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    If Governor Rauner who's demanded
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    some very extreme changes that are unrelated
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    to the budget that would hurt working people
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    like making it harder for folks that are
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    injured on the job to get medical care
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    like making it harder for folks to negotiate together
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    in the workplace and have a voice
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    and he won't develop a budget to fund higher education,
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    to fund Human Services to fund local governments
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    unless he gets these other things it's his way or no way.
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    It's been the same thing on the state contract now
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    we have negotiated contracts with governors
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    Republicans and Democrats for more than 40 years
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    we've never been forced to strike
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    we've always been able to find an agreement
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    that's fair to all and that's what we want to do here too
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    but that requires both sides at the bargaining table.
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    We're gonna put a graphic up here of what both sides
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    say the the demands are right now AFSCME says
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    that the governor would double the cost of health
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    insurance for employees of when a 4 year pay
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    freeze as you mentioned in a blank check out source
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    public services for private profit. Rauner's office
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    said his final offer includes $1,000 merit pay for employees
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    overtime after 40 hours bereavement leave and
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    actual drug and alcohol testing of those reasonably suspected
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    of use of on the job. Rauner's camp says this is going
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    to save the state a lot of money, he says that this
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    mirrors contracts they've negotiated with other
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    unions throughout the state so why won't this work.
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    Well so let's just pause for a little fact check here some
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    unions have reached an agreement there are
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    more than half a dozen unions that have
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    not including all of the largest unions state
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    government that don't have an agreement
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    but none of those who have settled,
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    had settled on the same terms as what
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    they're trying to force on AFSCME.
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    Other unions have taken a pay freeze
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    or higher health costs they're trying to
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    force AFSCME represented employees
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    to take both the pay freeze and the
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    higher health costs so that's very important
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    but you know really let's just put this in perspective
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    you have a person Bruce Rauner,
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    who last year took home $188 million.
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    $188 million as an hourly rate
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    that's $90,000 an hour that's
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    more than most state workers make
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    that's more than most Illinoisans make.
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    $90,000 an hour for Bruce Rauner another
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    hand saying that the child protection worker
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    that goes into a broken home to rescue a
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    kid from child abuse. Or the caregiver for
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    an aged or disabled veteran or a person with
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    mental illness or developmental disabilities.
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    That those folks having affordable healthcare
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    and decent pay are the problem out that
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    just doesn't compute for me and I think for
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    you know most reasonable people understand
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    that the governor's being unreasonable
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    he really needs to come back to the table
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    and negotiate. If he comes back to the
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    table let's ask me willing to compromise
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    a willing to meet in the middle on some
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    of his demands. Oh absolutely look
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    we've said that we are willing to modify
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    every proposal that we have put on
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    the table we were not at our final
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    offer back in January when he walked
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    away in fact on that very last day of negotiations
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    will we didn't know would be the last day
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    they blindsided us by walking away.
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    We had just made new compromise proposals
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    that they've never even responded to and
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    we're prepared to go further to try to meet
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    in the middle but that requires choosing
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    compromise not confrontation. That is the
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    choice that the governor faces if there is
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    continued litigation if there's a continuing
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    threat of a strike one person bears that
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    responsibility and it's Bruce Rauner.
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    I believe AFSCME's contract ran out about
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    a year and a half ago. You guys have been
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    negotiating in good faith willing to keep
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    going back to the bargaining table but
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    how long can you do this before we see a
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    work stoppage, how close are we to that to
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    that happening that in game. We are a
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    grassroots and a democratic organization.
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    Small D. Our members run the union they
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    are the union and they make the decisions
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    for what impacts their working lives and
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    that's as it should be. So they delegate a
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    bargaining committee of their co-workers
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    state employees on the front lines from all
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    over Illinois who develop proposals who
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    respond to the administration's proposals
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    if we can get back to the bargaining table
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    that's who will be there in the absence
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    of that if the governor continues to
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    go forward to try to impose his terms
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    to force workers to accept those
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    terms then that is a decision that
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    the membership was gonna make
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    by democratic vote either to live
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    under those terms or to authorize a
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    strike that wouldn't mean that there
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    would have to be a strike but they
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    could give their committee the power
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    to authorize a strike and I think that
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    you know that is something that in
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    the coming weeks that the committee
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    and the membership will have to consider
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    if the governor does not change and
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    pull us back from the brink of confrontation
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    that he's been driving to you know now
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    by refusing for a year to even sit down and talk.
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    Alright we'll leave that right here and
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    we'll see how that goes in the next few
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    weeks and see what happens,
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    Anders you so much for being here.
Title:
https:/.../15569261_1300357979987008_8153032192025427968_n.mp4?efg=eyJybHIiOjE1MDAsInJsYSI6MzMwOSwidmVuY29kZV90YWciOiJzdmVfaGQifQ%3D%3D&rl=1500&vabr=343&oh=0432c103fcd8124ea8d145f74f76bbbb&oe=58509267
Video Language:
English
Duration:
08:34

English subtitles

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