• SF213 – Prepared remarks by Sen. Chaz Allen of Newton

    Iowa Senate News Release
    For immediate release: February 14, 2017

    Mr. President and Members of the Senate:

    I rise today, not to debate or argue, but to share my experience.

    All in this room are familiar with Newton’s transformation from a company town dominated by Maytag to the diverse economy it is today.

    Bargaining is in the DNA of Newton and Jasper County, from the UAW Local 997 who represented Maytag, from Thombert’s and Progress Industries, from IBEW 347 who represent Trinity Structural Towers, from Teamsters that represent our Public Works employees, from PPME who represent the Police Dept., AFSCME for our county employees and correctional officers, and, of course, the firefighters.

    As we realized our community would not be the same with the departure of Maytag, we also realized we had to re- think how we operated as a city.

    For 100+ years, Maytag dominated how we thought about wages, benefits, and employee recruitment.

    As a city, we offered comparable benefits to attract the best talent. As many know, those benefits were quite good. No cost to very low cost healthcare and good wages.

    But, as we saw Newton change with the closure of Maytag, we understood we had to change our benefit structure to align with the remaining businesses in town and with the expectation of our constituents, the taxpayers.

    We immediately began discussion with all the City’s bargaining units: the firefighters, the police dept. and our Public Works. We knew the current structure could not be maintained and we needed to get employees to shoulder more of the cost of our healthcare premiums.

    At the end of the day, we reached an agreement with the unions that required employees to begin paying a greater portion of the benefits.

    Today, Newton city employees pay 12% of their premiums and 20% of any yearly increase.

    I bring this to your attention because this negotiations worked, not only for the city but for our community, our citizens and our local businesses.

    The contrary story was not as helpful to our community. At some point after Whirlpool took over Maytag, a (unilateral??) decision was made to require our Maytag retirees to pay $200 a month for their healthcare. Some will say, “Heck! $200 is a small price to pay for a healthcare package. I agree.

    This cost, however, is equated differently when taken in total, 3,600 retirees times $200 times 12 months = $8,640,000/year taken out of the Jasper County economy yearly.

    I was asked at recent forum, “How will the revisions of Chapter 20 affect my small business?”

    The answer is complicated, but, predictable. Any quick change in the short term can have a dramatic impact on a local community.

    For Newton, it was the reduction in a car dealership, the closure of a grocery store, closure of a clothing store on the square, the closing of a flooring store, and much higher rate of free and reduced lunches at our schools.

    What’s the lesson here?

    I believe the best approach is one that features cooperation and honest negotiations between management and workers, between neighbor and neighbor, between people who all have a stake in the success and prosperity of our communities.

    Newton didn’t bounce back because of mandates and new rules imposed by the Governor and a majority of the Iowa Senate and Iowa House.

    The people of Newton bounced back because they sat across the table from their neighbor, and they all had the chance to say: “How can we be worthier together, to make our community great again?”

    -end-

  • SF213 – Prepared remarks by Sen. Tod Bowman of Maquoketa

    Iowa Senate News Release
    For immediate release: February 14, 2017 

    Thank you, Mr. President.

    I rise today because I have real concerns about the purpose, intent and impact of this legislation on the people in my Senate district.

    Since this bill was introduced, I have:

    1. Received and answered hundreds of emails from my constituents
    2. Talked with hundreds of constituents on the street and on the phone.
    3. Even met last week with a group of six school superintendents.

    I have also read the bill and talked with my Senate colleagues about the details of the legislation.

    The bottom line is this: I can’t find a single reason why this bill would be good for the people of Iowa.

    As a teacher and former member of the negotiations team for the Maquoketa School District, I know first-hand the importance of being able to sit down at the negotiation table with our superintendent and school board members to talk about the next contract and about how to make our schools the best they can be.

    And that’s why teachers who teach our children, law enforcement officers who keep our neighborhoods and communities safe, firefighters who protect our health and safety, nurses who care for our loved ones every day, and other Iowa workers oppose this attempt to GUT the state’s collective bargaining law.

    If this bill is signed into law, it would create an unfair system that would take away the voices of workers in their own workplace.

    But don’t take my word for it.

    In my meeting last weekend, School Superintendents – the very Iowans who supporters of Senate 213 SAY should love, love, love this legislation – offered little or no support for most of the elements of the bill.

    George Pickup, who was Sen. Schultz’s High School government teacher and now is the current Principal of the Central DeWitt High School, told me that because of the expected impact of this legislation, morale in his school is already dipping because teachers are feeling not valued as professionals.

    George also said it will likely have a negative effect on retaining and hiring the best teachers.  And that he thinks it will have an effect on potential teachers entering our great profession.

    George said: “This is a slap in the face for teachers. We say we want to support a quality education system and then go back to pre Industrial Age mentality.  I really hope the lawmakers think how this will effect things 10-20 years and beyond.  Teachers like all professions need to feel valued. This legislation is not going to help.”

    Senator Schultz: you should listen to your former government teacher.
    I also talked with Gary Bruns, a Vocational AG instructor, an FFA advisor at Maquoketa high school and a strong Republican.

    Here’s what Gary told me:  “I have 6+ years of college education, 30+ years of teaching experience, I teach other teachers across the country in the summer, and if this bill passes and all of my rights are stripped away, I will end up with less rights and respect than  a high school McDonald’s employee.”

    Gary went on to say

    “Iowa already has a number of different teaching categories on the “shortage list”, meaning we don’t have enough new teachers graduating to fill the open positions. I don’t know who would be willing to put in 4 years of college to end up with a job that has low pay and NO rights.  On the other hand, a 4 year degree in with a job in the private sector will give you annual raises (maybe more than one a year), a possible bonus, and most importantly, a job where you will be treated as a professional.

    Dr. Kim Huckstadt, a 15-year superintendent with lots of collective bargaining experience, told me this:

    “Most superintendents who have participated in the collective bargaining process would likely identify some changes that would improve the process but the legislation currently proposed is an over-reach that will jeopardize our ability to attract and retain highly qualified educators to Iowa… In the final analysis, educational opportunities for students will be diminished. ”

    Dr. Fred Maharry, former superintendent of Delwood said “My concern about the proposed legislation is that if this is approved, smaller districts in Iowa will lose a lot of staff to larger districts because they won’t be able to compete in terms of salary and in terms of benefits so this is going to pit larger districts against smaller ones and the smaller ones are going to come out on the short end and it’s going to damage education for the kids in Iowa. Bad idea.”

    In the end, the superintendents were in agreement that:

    • While they had suggestions for reforming Chapter 20, none of those changes were in this bill. Specifically, they believe there are ways to address the problem of underperforming teachers, but my superintendents said the Legislature  could do better than what is being proposed.
      • I would have welcomed the opportunity to get more specific ideas from my superintendents, my teachers, parents and school board members about how to better address these concerns — but I have yet to be approached by any Republican Senators interested in working on a bipartisan solution in this bill. That’s a shame.
    • No one in the group spoke to support the many anti-union provisions – such as check-offs or decertification etc.
    • In fact, they all shared with me that insurance and supplemental pay should be continue to be part of the contract negotiations, that grievances should be permissive, and, they believed local control would be weakened if this bill passes and the new law would make Superintendents less effective leaders in their schools and communities.

    And don’t just take the word of a handful of superintendents.

    Actions speak louder than words. Maquoketa signed a 3 year contract, NE, Delwood and Western Dubuque have also signed contracts early. So, I have a question for supporters of this bill: Why are school boards, superintendents and teachers in my senate district and other parts of the state rushing to pass new contracts prior to this bill passing?

    I can tell you why. All involved think this is bad policy.

    I talked with Maquoketa’s Superintendent Chris Hoover today about their decision to negotiate early and he said ”The school board and I felt that it was the right the thing to do in a time when our employees needed to come together. We made a good faith effort to show teachers we respect them.” 99.99% of the language of the current Maquoketa contract he did not have a problem with. The process worked as usual.

    Teachers, administrators and other educators don’t understand why you do not respect them. I do not understand why you don’t respect the profession.

    If you think there is a teacher shortage now – just wait.  School districts will flounder in finding and retaining quality teachers.

    There is already an “exit strategy” going on.

    First-year teachers are talking about leaving the profession – looking to get a masters degree in other areas to exit the teaching profession or leave the state – Illinois is right next to Maquoketa. Our new teachers and students studying and investing in their career are the one who will be most hurt by this proposal.

     

    This is bad for the people of Iowa.

    So, if it is the intent of the Senate Republicans to hinder our rural schools, then vote yes.

    Supplemental pay – coaches

    Yes/No

    If I am a teacher who is part of a collective bargaining unit and a coach am I able to negotiate my supplemental pay with my superintendent?

    If I am not a teacher and I am a coach am I able to negotiate my supplemental pay with my Superintendent?

    My superintendents want this to be permissive

    It discriminates what a coach and teacher can and can’t do

    Obviously you have not thought this through or understand cause/effect

    -end-

  • SF213 – Prepared remarks by Sen. Amanda Ragan of Mason City

    Iowa Senate News Release
    For immediate release: February 14, 2017

    When I first read the bill before us — which rewrites Chapter 20 of the Iowa Code — I was dismayed by what I saw.  That emotion is still with me and will be for a long time.

    There is a valued injunction which definitely applies here:  “If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it.”

    Chapter 20 is NOT broken.

    For 43 years, it has artfully guided public employee relations throughout our state.  City, county, and state management leaders and their workers were able to bargain honorably.

    More important, the public was well-served by the decisions which insured public employees and government officials were treated with respect.  Additionally, the jobs, many of which are hazardous, were done professionally by dedicated workers.

    The bill before us today is a disaster.

    It shreds the protections afforded to workers and to management.  The bill is a statement that devalues public employees, and devalues the work they perform for all our citizens.

    I must concede those who authored this bill knew what they were doing.

    They knew who it would negatively impact.

    They knew how it would make service as a public employee in Iowa harder and more difficult.

    They knew they were denigrating lives and work ethics across the state, and, stunningly, they seem not to care.

    What they didn’t know — or care to know — was the importance of the jobs they were impacting, or the people, their constituents, who do those jobs.  This legislation was written, and will be enacted, by people who know nothing of the lives they are throwing into chaos.

    I will ask any advocate for this bill – – Do you have any knowledge of the people you are marginalizing and dishonoring with this bill?  Do you know them?  Have you talked to them?  Are they not neighbors of yours? And have you read their emails to you?

    They tell the story of families who have invested in their jobs, their families and their communities.

    I would like to know how you plan to convince your local public servants this is being done for their own good.  We hear over and over about jobs.  People want good jobs, high-skilled jobs, well-paying jobs.  This bill destroys that dream for 185,000 hard-working Iowans.

    Let us at least be up front – – this bill has nothing to do with making working conditions better for public employees.

    This bill has nothing to do with preserving the quality of services we enjoy.

    This bill has nothing to do with preserving a pathway to the middle class for others.

    This bill has everything to do with hurting and disrespecting people you don’t like or care to deal with – – Iowa public employees!

    Please at least be honest about the intentions of this bill.  It is designed to cut and gut.  This bill does not help people; it hurts people.  It makes a mockery of the phrase that “Iowa is a great place to live, work, and raise a family.”

    In the spirit of strong Iowa values, I strongly urge a NO vote for this bill.

    -end-

  • SF213 – Prepared remarks by Senator Nate Boulton, lead Democrat on Senate Labor Committee

    Iowa Senate News Release
    For immediate release: February 14, 2017

     

    Thank you, Mr. President. This amendment is our last chance to stop this freight train that is barreling towards our public workers. We’ve finally arrived at the point of no return on this. We have reached a point of potentially blowing up the system of reason and compromise that has served our state well for decades. The system that helped define the legacy of Governor Ray, a Republican who reached out to labor organizations and Democrats to design a system that has allowed our state to grow and succeed. Now we are at the point of no return. A system borne out of reason and compromise will be gutted and replaced by one which throws away reason and does so in a way that only compromises Iowa’s future.

    This fight means a lot to me. I was born to a union worker in a tire plant. His father, my grandfather, spent two decades as a union steward in a meatpacking plant. I’ve spent the past 11 years as a workers’ rights attorney. I have seen the horrors of workplace exploitation; I’ve helped workers through the devastating aftermath of injuries that occurred in some of our most dangerous public occupations.

    I’ve stood up for wrongfully terminated workers and have spent countless hours counseling longtime workers whose lives were turned upside down when they were fired without cause. I ran for the Iowa Senate with the hope that I could advocate for enhancing the lives of the workers who make this state run. I campaigned on furthering my fight for workers’ rights and enhancing the quality of life for Iowans and hoped we could take up the cause of uplifting the working class of this state. I now see that a different agenda is being presented—one that strips away workplace rights and scales back the benefits thousands of Iowans count on.

    Rural Iowa needs school employees and county employees to have good, quality jobs to make their local economies grow. While I am proud to live in and represent part of our state’s largest city, I am also proud that I grew up in a small town, Columbus Junction—I’m sure Senator Greene knows that community well. It’s a town of about 2,000 people in the middle of a county of about 11,000. It’s a place than needs good teachers and staff to educate its children—I’ve even done my part andserved a substitute teacher in one of its schools a few times in the early 2000s. It needs quality sheriff’s deputies to keep its communities safe. It needs to be served by skilled courthouse workers. Rural Iowa communities would be devastated if they lost the quality public employees who serve it, and small town economies will be hurt if their public service workers incomes and benefits were held back. And make no mistake, this is a bill that is designed to scale back the wages and benefits of workers in those communities.

    I’ve heard from a lot of taxpayers since this proposal came out last week. There were quite a few out on the Capitol steps this past Sunday and inside the Capitol last night. They told me that a fair process for determining the wages, working conditions, and benefits for public employees—a process that has been working for decades—is a good thing. They told me that good labor relations is good for the public that is protected and served.

    I’ve heard from school board members, county supervisors, and city council members. You know what? They seem to think this is a step BACKWARD on local control. And they’re right. They WANT to be able to work with the representatives of their employees to ensure they have the best employees, a stable workforce, and they are able to meet the needs of their workers while also protecting their budgets. Your bill dictates to them, and the public employees they count on to provide services to citizens and their children, a list of new topics that are ILLEGAL for discussion. Senate Republicans on the labor committee voted unanimously to make it ILLEGAL for most public employee and local government representatives to even discuss health insurance and grounds for termination. There are school boards, cities, and counties across Iowa that are scrambling to enact new contracts with their hard-working public servants before this legislation takes effect.

    They WANT to work through  a system under Iowa Code Chapter 20 that ensures fairness. That compels each side to be reasonable in negotiations and, when necessary, allows a neutral arbitrator to resolve disputes by making a final decision based on all relevant factors to adopt the most reasonable and fair proposal on the table. They want a system that allows workers to feel secure in their jobs rather than looking over their shoulders and fearing unfair reprisals. Why do some in this chamber fear a system of evidence based outcomes? Of neutral arbitrators evaluating and considering evidence. This bill replaces thoughtful evaluations of evidence with a rigged system that puts the fix in against employees. The end result of this “modernized” system is that most Iowa public employees could be forced without any meaningful input to work under a so-called bargaining agreement that forces them to accept no wage increases, dramatically increased insurance costs, and all for the pleasure of service as at-will employees. This isn’t modernizing, it’s marginalizing. It’s insulting to the intelligence of the workers who responding to the calling of public service to tell them this is anything short of a decimination of their current rights.

    There’s a lot of talk about bad teachers. I can tell you today that there are a lot of good teachers that fear what a politicized system of raises, bonuses, and retaliations will do to their schools. What about the bad administrators who will take advantage of this new opportunity to create poisonous workplace environments? What about a system than incentivizes undercutting and blaming teachers as scapegoats for systemic supervisory and administrative problems? Teacher working conditions are children’s learning environments. Many in this chamber have voted to underfund our schools and now you are following that up by stripping away the rights of teachers to negotiate a package that includes basic wages, benefits, and working conditions. Who will go into what is left of the teaching profession? How do you look a college student in the eye and tell them to go into teaching after completely devaluing their work and minimilzing the ircontributions to the future of our state this way?

    It’s bad public policy to blame the workers who put their lives on the line and who make incredible sacrifices for our state instead of blaming irresponsible budgeting practices that have allowed tax credits and exemptions to becoming the fastest growing part of the state budget.

    While I was out running on standing up for Iowa workers, I don’t remember anyone running a contrasting campaign about tearing down working Iowans, gutting the law that gives them a seat at the table on the terms and conditions of their employment, or making sure public servants can be fired from their jobs without justification. This secret agenda of the majority party in the Iowa Senate didn’t make the campaign ads and flyers—cutting public services, cutting access to health services for women, finding a new ways to fire workers, underfunding education, and other damaging hits to our communities.

    Let’s do something better. Let’s focus on ways to lift up wages and benefits across our state. We shouldn’t be rushing to tear down the quality of life of public servants. Instead we should be enhancing  the quality of life of Iowans who are willing to go to work every day for the betterment of our state and our communities.

    We want the best and brightest in our state serving it. When Iowans need to call 911, they should know that they’re talking to a reliable dispatcher, who will be sending help in the form of a police officer, firefighter, or EMT who is the right, well-qualified worker they need. We do that by attracting the best people for the job. We do that by respecting those employees by giving them a seat at the table, by giving them the wage and benefits they deserve. We do that by making sure they have a real voice in the workplace and security in their jobs.

    We need Social Workers who will look after the welfare of the most vulnerable children in our state, nurses who we can trust to take care of us when we need medical attention, snow plow drivers who keep our streets safe, and allow first responders to get through in emergencies regardless of the conditions.

    Our children know the value of public service. They see public service for what it is: a higher calling and a higher duty. There is a reason why kids want to grow up to be teachers, police officers, firefighters. They see the good those public workers do for us, they respect the sacrifices they make to serve their communities. When politicians blame public workers and label them as lazy and greedy, it is every bit as inaccurate as it is offensive. Veterans make up a disproportionately large percentage of public workers. They seek to continue the service of their country through service to their community. We cannot claim to appreciate those who serve in the military when we demean their service at home.

    Public safety professions, particularly police and fire, are symbolized by shields of protection. Their uniforms and shields are designed to communicate to us that they are here to protect us from harm. I’ve heard a lot of rhetoric that this bill shields public safety workers from the harm done to other workers—and it is harm, otherwise we wouldn’t need to spare anyone from it. But the reality is very few actual public safety workers are being shielded. There is no shield protecting EMTs and nurses. Nothing here to protect correctional officers who face extreme dangers in our prisons. No shield for the teachers and school staff who face increasing threats of violence in their classrooms. And no shield of protection for even the police officers and firefighters who can now be fired more easily, whose unions are weakened by new regulations, and who can simply lose out on any exemptions from the wrath of this legislation because they are in bargaining units with other workers. I’ve talked to the firefighters and police officers in my community who are “protected” by the carve outs in this bill. They see right through it. They see the rights they are losing and realize that that few rights they do retain will be the subject of the next overreach to “balance” the system.

    There is so much to this bill that is so incredibly harmful and insulting to public employees. It is evident that this legislation was conceived and drafted without their input. We have only begun to hear their concerns. I’ve received countless communications of employees who are truly afraid of what will happen to their families and the professions they love. This fast process with an immediate effective date has silenced the people who this very directly affects.

    It’s un-democratic. It takes critically important topics of fair negotiation and makes them illegal. It limits the conversation on the few remaining topics and puts workers in a position where the one true bargaining topic they still have—base wages—can only be negotiated for increases of between 0-3% in the best of times.

    And to even get to that point, employee organizations face an election that is stacked against them. The process lined out in this bill actually counts any vote that is not cast by someone eligible to vote as a vote against the union. Let me repeat that—some who doesn’t vote has his or her vote counted as being opposed to the union. Let that sink in. Each of us in this chamber represents approximately 60,000 Iowans. Under this system, any vote not cast would be counted against us in the final tally.

    But let’s not talk about this in abstract terms. How would this have affected some of the winners – including me – in the last election?  Let’s do the math together.

    If we take the number of votes casted for a candidate and divide it by the number of registered voters that didn’t vote in the recent general elections:

    In Senate District 36, Senator Edler only received 38.9% of the eligible vote.

    In Senate District 16, I only received 41.6% of the eligible vote.

    In Senate District 8, Senator Dawson only received 32.5 of the eligible vote.

    In District 7 in 2014, Senator Bertrand only received 27.5% of the eligible vote.

    And in District 31 in 2014, Senator Dotzler received 37.4% of the eligible vote.

     

    So, if we had used the math formula required for union certification elections outlined in this bill, Senators Edler, Dawson, Bertrand, Dotzler – as well as myself and many others in this chamber – would not be here today.

     

    That is so foreign to any basic concept of fairness that it could only fly in this flawed bill.

    This is NOT modernizing or tweaking.

    That’s just one many parts of this bill that smack of vendetta politics designed to hurt public sector unions in the bill before us.

     

    I’ve mentioned my father and his father, but I also want to mention my great grandfather on my mother’s side. Lewis Pugh was from North Wales. He served his country in World War I in the Royal Welsh Fusiliers and then came to America to seek out the hope and promise that has defined our nation across the globe. In 1900, A major mine in North Wales forbade the union from collecting workers’ contributions at the quarry knowing the difficulty it would present to collect contributions from individual homes across the region. The move backfired. Trade unionists joined the union in droves, and union membership of the 2,700 workers grew from under four hundred to nearly two thousand. What followed was a three year strike from 1900 to 1903—one British history. As the mine tried to break the strike with replacement workers, striking miners put cards in the houses of their windows. I keep a replica of one of those cards here on my desk. It reads “Nid Oes Bradwr Yn Y Ty Hwn” or “There Are No Traitors In This House.”  History tells us again and again the importance of labor peace—and the potential consequences when workers see efforts undertaken to strip away their hard-earned right to bargain collectively. They not only notice, they take action. And history tells us, those workers ensure that those setbacks are temporary and they come back stronger through that adversity. Make no mistake, Iowa’s public employees and the communities they serve will ensure that the devastation caused across our state by this proposal will only be temporary.

    In the end, this bill is really about hurting public employee unions and disregarding the real consequences to Iowa workers as a result.

    This debate we are having right now is about the very soul of our state. Whether we treat service to the pubic with dignity, whether a first-class public education really is an Iowa value, and whether we want to make enhancing the quality of life for working Iowans a real priority. We are on the threshold of history here.

    Chapter 20’s original enactment was historic—and history will judge us by where we take our stands today. Iowa’s public sector bargaining law has been repeatedly been celebrated as a bipartisan achievement for the long-term benefit of our state. We are set to see this chamber past the threshold of history in a much different way.

    Sadly, the Senate appears ready to establish a one-sided, expedited process to disadvantage hard working Iowans in an attempt to score a political victory over the unions that represent them.

    The future of Iowa’s economy is a risk with this far-reaching policy shift. It jeopardizes out ability to get quality teachers to enter the profession, to keep the best possible officers and firefighters keeping us safe, and to ensure the public will be well served by people who take pride in their work.

    Today, a majority in the Iowa Senate is sending about bad message about value you place on those who are willing to put in a hard day’s work to benefit the communities in which they live. We owe it to our citizens to serve them well and safeguard our economy, we compromise their safety and their future if we enact this bill and dishonor those who are called to public service in our state.

    I urge you to stop this here and now, and vote in favor of this amendment.

  • Boulton: Iowans need more health security, not less

    Iowa Senate News Release
    For immediate release: February 13, 2017
    Contact: State Senator Nate Boulton, 515-669-4259

     

    DES MOINES – A key Democratic Senator today announced plans to block a key provision in anti-worker legislation (Senate File 213) that would take away the health care security of hundreds of thousands of Iowa workers.

    “We will fight this attempt to take way health care security of hundreds of thousands of Iowa workers,” said State Senator Nate Boulton of Des Moines, lead Democrats on the Senate Labor Committee. “One of the most dangerous provisions of this anti-worker legislation would wipe out hundreds of health insurance plans for Iowa, teachers, correctional officers, EMTs, snow plow drivers, nurses and others who answer the call to serve our communities. That’s wrong.”

    Boulton said the first amendment he has filed to the legislation would strike a provision in the bill that prohibits management and employees from sitting down and negotiating the terms of health insurance benefits. Instead, the amendment establishes a special committee to study ways to improve the efficiency, cost-effectiveness and fairness of health insurance plans for public employees.

    “Rather than fast-tracking a major change in the health care coverage for hundreds of thousands of Iowans without any thoughtful planning, we are proposing an alternative that would include listening to locally elected officials and other managers, health care professionals and others,” Boulton said.

    Boulton said that well-planned reforms – rather than immediately ditching health care plans that have been mutually agreed upon by employers and their employees – would be a more effective way to attract and retain high-quality public employees across the state.

    “Taking away the health care security of thousands of hard-working Iowans is one of the worst aspects of this horrible piece of legislation,” Boulton said.

    ###

  • Legislative Leaders: It’s time to ‘slow down’ on major overhaul of workers’ rights and start listening to Iowans

    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: Monday, February 13, 2017
    CONTACT: Dean Fiihr, 515-281-0817

     

    DES MOINES – Responding to record turnout at legislative forums over the weekends and an outpouring of opposition to legislation that would significantly reduce workers’ rights across Iowa, Democratic leaders today called on Republican legislative leaders to “slow down” and to listen to the concerns of Iowans.

    “Iowans are angry. Iowans are confused. Iowans are concerned,” said House Democratic Leader Mark Smith of Marshalltown. “We are calling today on Republican legislative leaders to slow down their efforts to shove this legislation down the throats of Iowa workers. Firefighters, police officers, teachers, nurses, and other dedicated public servants deserve to be heard.”

    Smith pointed to forums over the weekend that attracted large and even overflow crowds across the state, including Ankeny, Council Bluffs, Davenport, Waukee, Cedar Falls, Elkader, Postville, Mason City and Independence. In addition, thousands of Iowans attended a pro-teacher rally on the grounds of the Iowa Capitol on Sunday.

    “When the state’s collective bargaining law was passed in the early 1970s, it took two years of discussion by legislators and their constituents, as well as days of debate before the legislation was adopted in a bipartisan manner,” said Senate Democratic Leader Rob Hogg of Cedar Rapids. “Iowans deserve more time to ask questions, to get straight answers and to better understand a major policy change that affects almost 200,000 hard-working Iowans. It’s time for all legislators – Republican and Democratic – to listen to the concerns of Iowans and to respond to those concerns.”

  • Today At 5:00 – Worker’s Rights Rally And Press Conference Before Public Hearing

    PROGRESS IOWA NEWS RELEASE
    For Immediate Release:
     February 13, 2017
    Contact: Matt Sinovic, (515) 423-0530

    Public Workers To Address Media
    Before Public Hearing On Collective Bargaining Bill In The House

    DES MOINES – Iowans will gather in support of worker’s rights for a rally and press conference before the House public hearing on HF291 Monday evening. Several of the public employees who plan to speak to the Iowa House will address the media beforehand. They’ll voice their frustration with the all-out, Republican-led attack on worker’s rights that has been fast-tracked through the Legislature despite no discussion of such sweeping changes in the previous election.

    WHO: Iowans standing with public workers
    WHAT: Workers Rally/Press Conference Before Iowa House Public Hearing
    WHEN: Today, Monday, February 13, 5:00 PM
    WHERE: Iowa State Capitol Rotunda, 1st Floor, 1007 East Grand Ave, Des Moines, Iowa

    ###

  • Tax break for farmers, small businesses, teachers & families

    Senate Democrats have introduced legislation to help Iowa taxpayers by “coupling” Iowa’s tax code with recent federal changes for 2016, the taxes Iowans must pay this April. Thousands of Iowans want to use these provisions, which have been available to them in previous years, to lower their state taxes.

    Senate File 428 will benefit nearly 24,000 farmers and small business owners by allowing them to take advantage of a provision called Section 179 expensing. Federal law allows these taxpayers to take a larger deduction on equipment they have purchased as an investment in their operations. If Iowa “couples” with the federal tax code, these folks also get to take a similar deduction on their state tax returns.

    The Republican chair of the Senate’s tax-writing committee says he does not intend to support the legislation this year, but I am not giving up. Thousands of Iowans want to use these provisions, which have been available to them in previous years, to lower their state taxes.

    Last year, tax coupling legislation helped:

    • More than 39,000 Iowa teachers who purchase supplies for their classrooms with their own money.
    • More than 43,000 Iowans who own their homes, by allowing them to deduct mortgage insurance premiums from their state taxes.
    • More than 18,000 Iowans who are going to college or getting training to improve their skills and better their lives.
    • More than 45,000 working Iowans who are married with three or more children, by expanding the Earned Income Tax Credit.
  • The Basics: Collective Bargaining & Chapter 20

    Download PDF: The Basics of Collective Bargaining

    The Iowa Public Employment Relations Act (often called Chapter 20 or Iowa’s collective bargaining law) was passed with bipartisan support and signed into law by Republican Governor Bob Ray in 1974. The law lays out the rules by which public workers and state/local government employers sit down and solve problems.

     

    KEY FACT: Iowa’s collective bargaining law also prevents public workers from striking, which is one of the reasons the law was passed.

    The bargaining topics between employees and employer are divided into three areas:

    1. Mandatory: listed in the law, including wages, insurance, overtime, health/safety
    2. Permissive. Both sides have to agree to negotiate on the topic.
    3. Management Rights and illegal topics to bargain, including retirement (IPERS)

    There is a long list of public employer rights listed in the law, which includes hiring, promotion, demotion or transfer of employees; suspension or discharge of public employees for proper cause; and maintaining the efficiency of governmental operations.

    In most cases, the two sides are able to sit down and negotiate on mutually agreed upon contract terms. In the rare instance (less than 3% last year) when the two sides cannot reach agreement, they can pursue mediation and/or arbitration.

     

    KEY FACT: The vast majority of public sectors contracts are resolved voluntarily. During the last bargaining cycle (FY 2016), 97.9% of contracts were resolved voluntarily.

    During mediation, an impartial neutral party helps facilitate dialogue between the employees and employer. This helps the two parties reach a resolution.

    During arbitration, the two parties have reached an impasse and submit their differences to a third party arbitrator. When making a decision, the law lays out the factors the arbitrator must consider, including: past contracts; comparisons with other public workers doing the same work; interests and welfare of the public (taxpayers); power of the public employer to levy taxes and appropriate funds. The arbitrator then determines which offer is the most reasonable and the decision is final and binding. This process forces both sides to have reasonable offers, not the extreme.

     

    KEY FACT:  Just last year, the Governor’s Public Employment Relations Board, which facilities our collective bargaining contracts, said “Few cases go to arbitration and the results are evenly balanced.” (Governor’s budget hearings, November 22, 2016)

  • Senator Petersen’s opening comments on SF 2, the Attack on Iowa Family Planning Services

    State Senator Janet Petersen’s opening remarks on SF2:

    Thank you Mr. President.

     

    This bill is bad for Iowa women and families.

     

    It will create more unintended pregnancies, more high risk pregnancies, and cost Iowa taxpayers more.

     

    Iowans don’t support it.  Doctors warn against it.  We should listen to them and reject it.

     

    Last week, Senator Sinclair held a 25-minute subcommittee on Senate File 2.

     

    Hundreds of Iowans came to the statehouse that day to make their voices heard about their opposition to Senate File 2, which will gut Iowa’s Family Planning Network.

     

    Senator Sinclair cut off their testimony after 25 minutes.

     

    Senators were not allowed time to ask questions about the bill or provide facts about Iowa’s Family Planning Network.

     

    I have served in the Iowa Legislature for 17 years.  I have never seen a subcommittee conducted that way.

     

    I stayed for nearly an hour after the meeting to listen to Iowans and make sure their stories were heard.

     

    It is unfortunate that not one of the 29 Republican sponsors stuck around to hear what Iowans have to say about their bill – Senate File 2.

     

    Apparently 28 Republican men and 1 Republican woman know what’s best for women’s health care.

     

    To the thousands of Iowans who have written me, asking me to FIGHT SF 2, and to the hundreds of Iowans who have SHOWN UP at the statehouse to have my back, I am HONORED to be your voice today.

     

    Here is what I’ve learned about Senate File 2 so far…

     

    Senate File 2 guts Iowa’s Family Planning Network, a program that has helped more than 80,000 Iowa women and men access family planning services across our state since 2006.

     

    We know the Iowa Family Planning Waiver works.

     

    It has helped reduce abortions and Medicaid costs in Iowa.

     

    The Iowa Family Planning Network is inexpensive for taxpayers.

     

    Iowa’s Family Planning Network program has saved Iowa taxpayers MILLIONS of dollars.

     

    We shouldn’t mess with the program.

     

    LET’S LOOK AT THE FACTS:

     

    The Iowa Family Planning Network WORKS.

     

    An evaluation of the program by the University of Iowa Public Policy Center in May of 2016 showed:

     

    1. The family planning waiver has increased the number of women receiving family planning services within the Medicaid program.

     

    1. Medicaid costs for deliveries and birth and first years of life have declined by nearly $345 million.

     

    1. Very conservative estimates of net Medicaid savings are more than $265 million.

     

    The Iowa Family Planning Network saves Iowa taxpayers money.

     

    For every 10 cents Iowa taxpayers invest in the program, we get an additional 90 cents from the federal government to help pay for the program.

     

    Iowans invest roughly $300,000 in the program each year.  When you add the federal dollars to Iowa’s investment, we get more than $3 million in preventative health services for Iowa women and men throughout the state.

     

    The University of Iowa study shows Iowa taxpayers have saved nearly $3.40 for every dollar they invested in the Iowa Family Planning Network.

     

    Under Senate File 2, Iowa will walk away from all of the federal funds that go to the Iowa Family Planning Network.

     

    The new program devised by 28 men and 1 woman in the Iowa senate, NONE of WHOM have a medical degree, will put the entire cost of the program on the backs of Iowa taxpayers.

     

    It is also important to note, there is no money in Senate File 2 to start this new program.

     

    Yesterday, Rep. Hogg asked Senate President Whitver to send the bill to the budget committee after we received the fiscal note that shows Iowa taxpayers will have to pay $3 million more EVERY YEAR for this Republican concocted program.

     

    The President’s ruling:

     

    Apparently, it doesn’t matter how much Republican-sponsored bills cost Iowa taxpayers anymore.

     

    Just pass the bill and worry about the money later.  We’ve heard that one before.

     

    The current Iowa Family Planning program has reduced unintended pregnancies and abortions.

     

    Senate Republicans want to scrap the successful program and force Iowa taxpayers to spend 10 times the money just to exclude Planned Parenthood from providing care to Iowa women and men.

     

    SENATE FILE 2 does more than DEFUND PLANNED PARENTHOOD.

     

    Under the Republican plan – Senate File 2 completely eliminates the Iowa Family Planning Network and replaces it with a state-run program that doesn’t exist and doesn’t have guaranteed funding to make it happen.

     

    IT IS IMPORTANT TO REMEMBER, the Iowa Family Planning Network has NEVER funded abortions.

     

    The Iowa Family Planning Network has been successful in preventing abortions and improving Iowa’s birth outcomes.

     

    When you make it harder for Iowans to access family planning services, you increase the number of unintended pregnancies.

     

    Gutting the Iowa Family Planning Network will cause more unintended pregnancies and abortions.

     

    Senate File 2 – puts politicians in charge of women’s health care and THAT IS DANGEROUS.

     

    We’ve been told a new state program will offer more providers and give women more options.  That simply is not true.

     

    On Tuesday, I questioned several bill sponsors about how their new program would “increase access.”  Not one senator could answer the question.

     

    Iowa women aren’t buying your “increased access” talking point.

     

    That is because SF 2 DOES NOT “INCREASE ACCESS” to providers.

     

    Senate File 2 DOES NOT GIVE WOMEN MORE OPTIONS FOR HEALTH CARE.

     

    In fact it will force thousands of Iowa women to leave a provider they chose and go to a provider selected by 29 politicians.

     

    It will disqualify many of Iowa’s most qualified health specialists from serving Iowa women in the program.

     

    Providers aren’t magically going to fall out of the sky for this new program.

     

    The so-called TIER process outlined in the bill and in DHS’s plan is totally confusing.  We just got DHS’s plan yesterday.

    Finding a provider to give you a Pap Smear shouldn’t be rocket science, but thanks to Senate Republicans – it soon could be.

     

    EXAMPLE – if you pick a TIER 3 provider – you’ll have to let them know you would have to travel more than 25 miles to see another provider.

     

    DHS says they can do marketing to explain their new PAP SMEAR TIERS.

     

    Is that really what we want DHS wasting their time doing?

     

    WOULDN’T we rather have DHS spend its time doing child protective investigations, figuring out how to get better mental health care for Iowans, taking care of Iowans with disabilities?

     

    WHY are we getting rid of a program that works?

     

    WHY are we getting rid of a program that prevents abortions and unintended pregnancies and the spread of sexually transmitted infections?

     

    The bill doesn’t even explain how, when and how much providers will get paid to participate in the program.

     

    Let’s remember, the women participating in our current Family Planning Network program are not participating in the program for ABORTIONS.  It is the absolute opposite.

     

    These Iowa women are participating in the Iowa Family Planning Network to take care of their bodies and to prevent unintended pregnancies and abortions.

     

    YET, now a group of 29 politicians (28 of whom have NEVER gotten completely undressed, put on a paper gown, and put their feet in the stirrups for a vaginal exam) are telling women they know what is best for them.

     

    Iowans have every right to be concerned about this legislation.

     

    Iowa taxpayers have every right to be angry that we are giving up millions of dollars in federal funding to start another government program that will be paid for fully on the backs of Iowa taxpayers.

     

    Iowans who worry about the health and safety of our children, people with mental illness and disabilities, should be piping mad that this program will take away funds that should have been going to them.

     

    To the thousands of Iowa women who may lose their health care coverage and family planning coverage when Republican repeal ObamaCare – Senate File 2 is not prepared to add you to the program.  You will be out of luck for your care under the new Republican program.  It will offer first come, first serve birth control.  If we keep our current system that actually works, the program would be able to include you – and at a very small cost to Iowa taxpayers.

     

    God forbid, if we have a ZIKA outbreak or other disaster – the size of the program will not increase to keep up with the demand for Family Planning services as it would under the current Iowa Family Planning Waiver.

     

    The document I received from DHS on Tuesday STATES on PAGE 5 – If spending exceeds the appropriated amount, CLAIMS WILL NOT BE PAID.

     

    Yesterday, I asked a few of the bill sponsors about the letter we received from the American Congress of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) and American College of Nurse-Midwives.

     

    One sponsor said he’s sure he got the letter, but he didn’t read it or remember reading it.

     

    IT WAS A WARNING LETTER ABOUT THE BILL from Iowa’s top health care professionals.

     

    • READ LETTER-

     

    I cannot stress enough how dangerous it is to IGNORE doctors warnings about the dangers of this bill to women, girls and families in our state.

     

    DO NOT TELL ME YOU ARE SUPPORTING THIS BILL BECAUSE YOU ARE PRO-LIFE – because this bill will most certainly lead to TRAGEDY like it has already, affecting our sisters in Texas.

     

    • HIGHLIGHT Texas Disaster examples

     

     

    BOTTOM LINE –

     

    This bill is dangerous and endangers the health of thousands of Iowa women.

     

    This bill will cost Iowa taxpayers more money.

     

    Under this bill Iowa women fewer options for their health care, NOT MORE.   It decreases access.

     

    • 28 Republican men and 1 Republican woman will tell women where they can go and can’t go for their care.

     

    • Let’s remember – 74% of Iowans support public funding to Planned Parenthood for family planning

     

    THIS NEW PROGRAM only offers FIRST COME, FIRST SERVE birth control.

     

    Who wants to come to a state that treats women like that?

     

    Senate Republicans got rid of the economic development committee after taking control of the Iowa Senate.  They said ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT would be part of every committee’s work.

     

    SO, let me say this – Senate File 2 – is a step in the wrong direction.

     

    Gutting the Iowa Family Planning Network is not going to help Iowa improve its ranking from DEAD LAST for women entrepreneurs.

     

    Why would we GUT the Iowa Family Planning Network?

     

    The program works.

     

    It SAVES taxpayers millions of dollars

     

    It has helped reduce abortions and Medicaid costs.

     

    We shouldn’t mess with it.

     

    I urge the body to stand up for Iowans.

     

    Stand up for Iowa women.

     

    Stand up for Iowa girls.

     

    Stand up for Iowa’s future.

     

    REJECT SF 2.

     

    END