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blake 3:17
21st April 2013, 09:23
Detroit emergency manager eyes end to union bargaining

By Steve Neavling
DETROIT | Fri Apr 19, 2013 6:56pm EDT
(Reuters) - Detroit's emergency manager indicated for the first time that he may end collective bargaining with city employees as part of his effort to shore up the city's sagging finances.

Kevyn Orr, a former bankruptcy lawyer, alerted state labor officials on Thursday that he has no legal requirement to bargain or participate in compulsory arbitration with Detroit's public safety unions.

The statement by Orr, sent in letters to state employment relations officials, is his first public indication that he actively is considering exercising some of the most sweeping powers granted to him under the 2012 state law that created the position of emergency manager.

Detroit has agreements with some 48 unions, and outside analysts say the city needs concessions from organized labor if it is to restore public finances devastated by a shrinking population and high unemployment.

Staking out his position in the letters, Orr stated that Detroit is in receivership, and he has no duty to bargain under procedures set forward in the state Public Employment Relations Act. The city and its lawyers "are authorized to advance this position and seek...any and all relief available by law," he said.

Orr's move incensed unions for firefighters, police officers and paramedics, whose current pacts with the city end on June 30.

"It's obvious what they're trying to do: They don't plan to negotiate with us," Dan McNamara, president of the firefighters' unions, told Reuters.

Orr's spokesman, Bill Nowling, said the emergency manager won't decide what to do with labor contracts until he meets with the city's 48 unions. He described Orr's actions as a legal formality.

"There's no declaration that we are walking away from the negotiating table," Nowling told Reuters. "It doesn't mean we won't meet in good faith with the unions."

Orr's letter represents a departure from his previous public posture. When the city through Mayor Dave Bing's office sent a similar notice in early April, Orr seemed to distance himself. His office stated that Orr had no prior knowledge of the letter.

This time, Orr and the city are working in parallel. On the same date that Orr sent his letters, the city of Detroit also filed a motion with the Michigan Employment Relations Commission asking it to rule that state arbitration panels no longer have authority to hold hearings or rule on cases brought by the unions representing Detroit police and emergency medical technicians.

The city also contends in its motion that a 2012 Michigan law governing state-appointed emergency managers automatically suspended Detroit's duty to bargain with its unions.

Detroit's unionized police, fire, and paramedics are working under contracts imposed on them last summer by Bing, who cut their pay by 10 percent. Employees also were required to pay 20 percent of their medical costs.

Detroit is running a $100 million annual budget deficit and a state report said it has some $14 billion in long-term debt.

Orr, who formerly worked on the restructuring of auto company Chrysler, was appointed last month by Michigan's Republican Governor Rick Snyder despite objections from elected city officials.

(Additional reporting by Karen Pierog in Chicago; editing by Andrew Hay)

http://www.reuters.com/article/2013/04/19/us-usa-detroit-unions-idUSBRE93I1B120130419

blake 3:17
21st April 2013, 09:38
A bourgeois backgrounder on the situation:

‘Olympics of restructuring’: Michigan takes over debt-crushed Detroit in bid to mop up fiscal mess

Michigan Governor Rick Snyder on Thursday announced a state takeover of Detroit’s finances and appointed as manager a corporate bankruptcy expert who took a can-do attitude toward turning around the destitute city, calling it the “Olympics of restructuring.”

Kevyn Orr, an attorney who worked on the restructuring of Michigan-based automaker Chrysler, said as the city’s emergency financial manager he hoped to avoid a bankruptcy filing by Detroit, something that would rank as the biggest municipal bankruptcy in U.S. history.

The big winners in Detroit’s fiscal crisis? Wall Street bankers

The only winners in the financial crisis that brought Detroit to the brink of state takeover are Wall Street bankers who reaped more than US$474-million from a city too poor to keep street lights working.

Continue reading . . .
“Let’s get at it and work together because we can resolve this, people of good faith. Don’t make me go to bankruptcy court,” Orr told a news conference, where he was introduced by Snyder and flanked by Detroit Mayor Dave Bing.

The announcement marked a watershed moment in the history of Detroit, which has been in a long economic decline. The city was the birthplace of Motown music and once the thriving center of the U.S. auto industry. In the 1950s, it was the fifth largest American city at 1.8 million people, but now ranks 18th with 700,000.

Snyder praised Orr, 54, as the right person for the job.

“He’s had a very successful career in restructuring and bankruptcy. He’s one of the leading experts in the country,” Snyder said.

In addition to his work with Chrysler – for which Orr billed US$1-million in fees during the first year of the restructuring of the smallest of the three major U.S. automakers – Orr has other Michigan ties. He received both undergraduate and law degrees from the University of Michigan.

...

It is rare for such a large American city to come so close to bankruptcy. The best known case was New York City, which was nearly forced into bankruptcy in 1975 after it ran up huge debts. The state of New York appointed an oversight board to guide its finances.

The most recent major city to face such a crisis was Philadelphia in 1991, which was managed by the state of Pennsylvania for a time.

Neither of those cities officially filed for municipal bankruptcy.

James Spiotto, law partner at Chapman and Cutler in Chicago and one of the nation’s top experts on municipal restructuring, said Detroit has a good chance of avoiding bankruptcy.

“I am optimistic that you have good people at the city, good people at the state and a good emergency financial manager. It’s got all the ingredients for being successful,” he said.

Some investors remain wary of owning Detroit’s debt.

“We need to have a clearer picture of what their liabilities are,” said Guy Davidson, a prominent institutional investor as the director of municipal bonds at Alliance Bernstein.

“We need revenues in line and to see basic services delivered at costs that fit their economy,” Davidson said. “When we see that … we can think about being investors again.”

http://business.financialpost.com/2013/03/15/detroit-fiscal-crisis/

Popular Front of Judea
21st April 2013, 09:42
Clearly there is a "good cop", "bad cop" game in play with the emergency manager playing the role of the "bad cop".


This time, Orr and the city are working in parallel. On the same date that Orr sent his letters, the city of Detroit also filed a motion with the Michigan Employment Relations Commission asking it to rule that state arbitration panels no longer have authority to hold hearings or rule on cases brought by the unions representing Detroit police and emergency medical technicians.

The city also contends in its motion that a 2012 Michigan law governing state-appointed emergency managers automatically suspended Detroit's duty to bargain with its unions.

blake 3:17
26th April 2013, 03:35
Bing picks up petitions, still deciding on re-election bid


DETROIT (WJBK) -
There was an unexpected scene Thursday outside the Coleman A. Young Municipal Center in Detroit. Hundreds were forced to evacuate because of smoke in the boiler room.

However, it got even more unpredictable once everyone was allowed back inside. In the clerk's office with cameras surrounding him, Mayor Dave Bing signed his nomination petition and collected his petition forms, but then in a news conference that followed, he said he still hasn't completely made up his mind.

"When I make the decision to get in it, then yes, I'm in it to win it," Bing said.

Bing moves forward on a move to run for re-election for mayor of a city that right now is under the control of an emergency manager. Kevyn Orr has 17 months left to fix the city's finances.

Bing, who still supports state control, feels it will take longer than that, and he wants to finish what he started despite the criticism that he has faced along the way.

"I'm not sure that another four years will fix the city, but at least I think it puts you on a path that's going to be positive," Bing said.



Read more: http://www.myfoxdetroit.com/story/22078030/detroit-mayor-dave-bing-to#ixzz2RX6bMoVy

blake 3:17
26th April 2013, 03:43
Clearly there is a "good cop", "bad cop" game in play with the emergency manager playing the role of the "bad cop".

There's been similar stuff here in Ontario. It's bit of a bluffing game, but when our side is so weak...