The City Council union and golden (arches) rule
Presented by Healthcare Education Project
With help from Jason Beeferman
Will New York City Council Speaker Adrienne Adams’ own staff get the same rights she helped extend to fast food workers?
Adams is a hypocrite, the New York City Council staff union says. When she was the lead sponsor of a 2021 law to ban fast food companies from firing workers for arbitrary reasons, she said, “Getting fired without just cause should not be something any New Yorker has to be afraid of.”
But council staffers are afraid. They’re at-will employees and “can be fired at any time, for any reason,” said Matt Malloy, stewards’ representative on the executive board of the Association of Legislative Employees, the council staff union. “And we just think that’s totally unacceptable.”
The union has been bargaining with Speaker Adams’ office for a contract since May 2022. And they’ve been ramping up the public pressure for a deal in the last couple months. They’ve picketed every stated meeting of the full council, and got 14 members to wear pins publicly showing support.
The current sticking point: the “swiss cheese grievance policy,” Malloy said. The speaker’s office has proposed that new staff would have a one-year probationary period where they could be fired at-will. Disciplinary protections would be revoked for six months after election years. And chiefs of staff would be exempted completely, even though they’re under the same civil service title as other member aides.
That’s an issue because members’ offices are their own little fiefdoms — and some have been accused of union busting. Three council aides shared their stories with Playbook and were granted anonymity to avoid further retaliation.
One staffer started organizing with the union. Soon, they were offered a new job in the office that was a demotion. And when the aide asked for a union representative to join the discussion, they were fired immediately.
Another staffer took a more active role in the union in their office. When their member found out, the staffer was moved from full-time to part-time employment, and their salary was reduced.
A third staffer talked openly about being gay in the office. A coworker said that would be a problem for the members, and the staffer didn’t “really fit in this office.” They were soon fired.
Those stories, while only one side of it, fit into a long history of complaints about council jobs, including low pay, long hours, mercurial bosses and high turnover.
Negotiations aren’t easy, since this is an entirely new contract. But for now, the pro-union speaker is biting her tongue. “The Council continues to negotiate with the ALE in good faith at the bargaining table, not through the media,” a Council spokesperson told Playbook. – Jeff Coltin
IT’S TUESDAY. Got news? Send it our way: Jeff Coltin, Emily Ngo and Nick Reisman.
WHERE’S KATHY? Signing housing legislation in Brooklyn, then signing legislation to make Diwali a school holiday in New York City.
WHERE’S ERIC? Making an economic opportunity and public safety-related announcement, holding an off-topic media availability session and hosting a reception to celebrate Native American and Indigenous heritage.
QUOTE OF THE DAY: “We’re talking about helicopters!” — Mayor Eric Adams, in response to a reporter who asked about the latest on the campaign finance scandal swirling around the mayor during an unrelated announcement at the Downtown Manhattan Heliport. He’ll have his weekly briefing with reporters this morning.
WAR-TIME TOUR: Thirteen New York City politicians are in Israel this week for an all-expenses paid solidarity tour hosted by the Jewish Community Relations Council of New York.
The attendees are Manhattan Borough President Mark Levine; Queens Borough President Donovan Richards; state Sens. Brad Hoylman-Sigal and John Liu; Assemblymembers Ed Braunstein, Grace Lee, Stacey Pheffer-Amato, Linda Rosenthal, Amanda Septimo and Tony Simone; and City Councilmembers Erik Bottcher, Gale Brewer and Marjorie Velázquez.
JCRC provided the names Monday, saying the visit is “an opportunity for participants to show their solidarity with the people of Israel in the wake of the Oct. 7 attacks by Hamas that killed over 1,400 Israeli civilians and kidnapped over 240 people who remain in Gaza as hostages.”
Since then, the Israeli government has waged war on Hamas, and more than 11,000 people have died in Gaza, according to the Hamas-Controlled Health Ministry, which doesn’t differentiate between the deaths of soldiers and civilians.
It’s an incredibly tense time to visit, and the reaction that regular JCRC tours receive — both support and contempt — is expected to be amplified. JCRC spokesperson Tzipporah Shapiro declined to share the itinerary “due to security concerns” and said there are “extra security precautions in place” from a typical trip.
The trip drew criticism. JCRC trips are meant to give legislators positive feelings about the “explicitly racist government” of Israel, said Sophie Ellman-Golan, a spokesperson for the progressive group Jews For Racial & Economic Justice. “We appreciate that elected officials want to be in solidarity with Jews, but if they’re not going to extend that solidarity to Muslims and Palestinians, then that solidarity is actually extremely divisive, and not what New Yorkers need right now.”
JCRC is also hosting a concurrent trip for 14 New York faith leaders including Bishop Mitchell Taylor and Rev. Al Cockfield, both Adams’ allies. – Jeff Coltin
SHORTER STAYS FOR MIGRANTS: The city began issuing notices Monday that limit single adult migrants in Department of Homeless Services-run shelters to 30-day stays.
“This process will be accompanied with the roll out of intensified case management services at these sites,” read an email to City Councilmembers obtained by Playbook. The services include help reconnecting with family and traveling to a “final destination.”
An Adams spokesperson confirmed the new notices.
The city already places a time limit at shelters run by other agencies; adult migrants must leave after 30 days and migrant families with children must exit after 60 days. They may reapply to stay in the city’s care, but beds are not immediately guaranteed.
Department of Social Services Commissioner Molly Wasow Park noted at a council hearing last month that about 2,000 single adult migrants were staying in DHS shelters, Gothamist reports.
The latest update to the city’s migrant policy came as Adams toured the Floyd Bennett Field site that opened to migrant families on Sunday. “This is not the best conditions,” he acknowledged, reupping his plea for help with the migrant surge. – Emily Ngo and Jeff Coltin
More from the city:
— A study found no increase in crime accompanied the opening of two safe injection sites, though by some measures, there were increases in arrests and quality of life complaints. (New York Daily News)
— Anne Williams-Isom is the de facto manager of the multiagency response to the 130,000 asylum-seekers who’ve arrived in the city since spring 2022. (City & State)
WORK PERMITS A NO-GO: New York won’t try to grant state-issued licenses to expand work permits to migrants.
Hochul on Monday told reporters in Manhattan the idea was abandoned over concerns it would open employers up to prosecution.
“I’m constrained by the law,” Hochul said. “Pursuing it has led to the conclusion that I can’t protect employers.”
She added, “I cannot indemnify or protect employers from any kind of prosecution. That’s one of the barriers.”
Hochul has placed a premium on making it easier for migrants to find jobs in the hope that other issues like housing and food would fall into place as a result. She had previously hinted at the possibility of seeking a federal waiver for expanded work approval, but it seemed unlikely such a request would be granted.
And as the governor plans her budget proposal to be unveiled early next year, she has signaled the state will pull back aid for long-term hotel stays in favor of legal support and job placement. – Nick Reisman
MWBE CONCERNS: An affordable housing organization and a real estate group are raising concerns in a letter to top state officials to permanently extend Article 15a, the provision that created the state’s initial program to spur minority and women-owned businesses.
At issue as the law expires next year is how the U.S. Supreme Court’s ruling that struck down affirmative action on college admissions could impact the renewal of the law.
“New York State, and the nation with it, are a long way from an equitable economy,” the Local Initiatives Support Corporation and the New York Real Estate Chamber wrote in the letter sent Monday obtained by Playbook. “The reality is, the persistent racial wealth gap, the product of generations of slavery and systemic racism, holds back the full power of our economy. Only when all New Yorkers are able to participate on equitable footing will we reach our true, and full potential.”
The organizations are also calling for a revised certification process and an expansion of how contracts are awarded in addition to the permanent extension. – Nick Reisman
WALSH FOR STIRPE: Democratic state Senate hopeful Al Stirpe is getting the backing of independent Syracuse Mayor Ben Walsh.
“I am proud to support him in his campaign for New York State Senate to bring common sense solutions to the challenges we face and advocating for much needed resources for Central New York,” Walsh said in a statement.
Stirpe, an Assemblymember, and former Oswego County Legislator Tom Drumm are competing for the Democratic nomination. Both men want to replace Democratic House candidate John Mannion in the central New York Senate seat. – Nick Reisman
GONZALEZ BACKS LLC BILL: Brooklyn District Attorney Eric Gonzalez will endorse Tuesday a bill meant to pry more information from the often opaque world of limited liability companies. The measure, heading to Hochul’s desk, could lead to more information on the ownership structure of the entities.
“This crucial legislation would allow law enforcement and the public to access the same information we require from other types of corporations, facilitating my office’s efforts to hold building owners accountable for actions that put tenants, workers and the public at risk,” Gonzalez said in a statement to Playbook.
He’s the latest elected official to back the proposal sponsored by state Sen. Brad Hoylman-Sigal and Assemblymember Emily Gallagher, joining Attorney General Tish James, Comptroller Tom DiNapoli and Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg. – Nick Reisman
More from Albany:
— Hochul has formed a commission to review the future of health care in New York. (Buffalo News)
— New York is expanding its anti-hate crimes efforts to include more investigators embedded with the FBI. (POLITICO Pro)
— Partnership for NYC’s Kathryn Wylde backs the Clean Slate Act. (Daily News)
CONSOLIDATING BEHIND SUOZZI: Outgoing Nassau County Legislator Josh Lafazan will drop his bid for Congress today and endorse former Rep. Tom Suozzi, Playbook has learned.
“With the stakes so high for our democracy, we must flip this seat and get rid of the embarrassment that is George Santos,” Lafazan said of the indicted Republican. “Tom is the candidate who can win this race.”
Lafazan added of Suozzi, “I will be relentless in campaigning all across NY-03 for my friend and colleague.”
His exit from the Democratic field of contenders for Santos’ seat in Nassau and Queens comes a week after Zak Malamed left the race and endorsed Suozzi.
Democrats are beginning to coalesce behind Suozzi, but several other candidates remain in the race.
Lafazan lost his bid for reelection to the county Legislature last week. – Emily Ngo
RILEY’S ENDORSEMENTS: Five House Democrats from New York on Tuesday will endorse Democratic Hudson Valley candidate Josh Riley, Playbook has learned.
Reps. Greg Meeks, Grace Meng, Joe Morelle, Pat Ryan and Paul Tonko are endorsing Riley’s latest bid to take on Republican incumbent Marc Molinaro.
“Josh Riley will work with anyone to make progress for Upstate New Yorkers,” Meeks said in a statement to Playbook. “I am honored to endorse his candidacy in NY-19.”
This is Riley’s second campaign for the House seat in the Hudson Valley after unsuccessfully running for it against Molinaro last year.
Molinaro, seeking a second term, is among the five Republican freshmen who Democrats hope to unseat next year in order to win back control of the House. – Nick Reisman
More from the delegation:
— Former Rep. Max Rose is advising Organize New York, an liberal initiative planning to spend $9 million to register young people to vote ahead of 2024. (Huff Post)
— Wednesday is the day the state Court of Appeals will hear arguments in the critical redistricting case for House seats in New York. (POLITICO)
— Passing the Regents exam may no longer be a graduation requirement for New York high schools after new recommendations from the state’s Education Department. (POLITICO Pro)
— Buffalo is refusing to pay residents for damages from last year’s deadly blizzard. (Buffalo News)
— The Amtrak shutdown along the New York to Albany rail lines was prompted by a discovery of cracked steel beams at a Midtown parking garage. (Gothamist)
— A push to fine drivers who illegally pass stopped school buses is already being tested in Yonkers. (LoHud)
MAKING MOVES: Amy Rutkin will retire in January after 25 years as chief of staff to Rep. Jerry Nadler (D-N.Y.).
HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Peter Lattman ... Jonathan Landman … AARP New York Legislative Representative Bill Ferris … Estee Lauder’s Joshua Friedlander … Lana (Volftsun) Fern
OUT & ABOUT: New York Jews in Politics held a government staffers happy hour at Sen Sakana in Midtown. SPOTTED: Co-founders Moshe Davis, Adrien Gardner Lesser, Pesach Osina and Eva Wyner and attendees Menashe Shapiro, Joel Eisdorfer, Commissioner Fred Kreizman, Deputy Mayor Fabien Levy, redistricting Queen Miranda Goodwin-Raab, and HPD’s Ilana Maier and Gaby Eiss. (X Pic)
— The iconic 35-story Helmsley Building on Park Ave. is at risk of defaulting on its mortgage. (Crain’s New York Business)
— The mortgage on Donald Trump’s 40 Wall St. tower was transferred to a special servicer. (Bloomberg)
Source: https://www.politico.com/