Legislature Leans Toward Giving Malloy More Layoff Power

Other Curbs on Unions, Not So Much

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Connecticut Mirror

The General Assembly is poised today to grant Gov. Dannel P. Malloy's request for additional budget-cutting authority in response to a failed labor concession deal, but his proposal to curb some collective-bargaining rights for state employees faces resistance in the House.

The budget cutting authority will come with strings: The legislature intends to retain the right to review Malloy's additional budget cuts, which would take effect automatically after a 30-day review period if lawmakers do not return for a second vote.

Rep. Toni E. Walker, D-New Haven, the co-chair of the Appropriations Committee, said there is a strong consensus for the legislature to retain the ability to shape the budget revisions after a review by her committee.

But the wildcard Malloy introduced Tuesday--legislation that would limit sick days and redefine how pensions are calculated--took leaders and rank-and-file legislators by surprise.

At midday, with the House and Senate Democratic majorities beginning closed-door caucuses, the Senate was preparing its own bill making at least some of the labor changes sought by Malloy, a sign of the resistance in the House.

By voting on the expanded budget authority and the labor changes separately, disagreement between the House and Senate over the labor issues would not jeopardize the budget revisions.

A routine vote over the rules for the special session erupted into a debate over the scope of the session in the House, with Minority Leader Lawrence F. Cafero Jr., R-Norwalk, sharply questioning Majority Leader J. Brendan Sharkey, D-Hamden, over whether collective-bargaining laws would be germane.

Sharkey declined to say.

House Speaker Christopher G. Donovan, D-Meriden, refused to comment in any detail on the governor's labor proposals, which some lawmakers interpreted as an other nudge for the unions to reconsider the concessions. The unions announced Monday they will try to salvage the deal, without saying how.

"We left here believing that was going to take place," Donovan said of the concessions, valued by the administration as worth $1.6 billion over two years. "So we certainly encourage the unions to come to an agreement."

The fiscal year begins July 1, but there is a budget already signed into law, albeit one with a large deficiency. There is time to salvage the concessions, if the unions can figure how to do, before Malloy's plan to balance the budget with 5,500 layoffs fully takes hold.

With notice requirements, most of the layoffs could not occur until late summer, giving the administration and labor a narrow window to avert mass layoffs and other budget cuts.

Labor had a small presence at the state Capitol today. Fewer than a dozen union members wearing green AFSCME t-shirts stood outside the House, then sat in the gallery.

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