Skip to content

Workforce

Category: Archive

Posted on October 29, 2009June 27, 2018

New National Health Care Claims Database to Replace Flawed System


New York state Attorney General Andrew Cuomo selected Syracuse University to lead a research effort that will create a new national health care claims database. The new entity will create an alternative to the one owned by Ingenix, which was the subject of an investigation and fines by his office.


Cuomo has said that the flawed Ingenix database was improperly used by health insurers across the country to pay low out-of-network medical claims. Cuomo said he would use the fines collected—about $100 million—to create an alternate database.


On Tuesday, October 27, he announced the selection of Syracuse to lead the development. The initiative, called FAIR Health, will be based at Syracuse and coupled with an upstate research network that will create a more transparent reimbursement database.


Ingenix is owned by insurer UnitedHealthcare. The new upstate network will involve Cornell University and the State University College at Buffalo.


The American Medical Association was quick to hail the announcement.


“Syracuse University has exceptional resources and respected experts who have demonstrated a deep understanding of the medical profession’s concerns with the Ingenix database,” the AMA said in a statement. “The combined resources of Syracuse University and the upstate research network should result in the rapid creation of a new database that is free of the flaws inherent in the Ingenix database.”


In June, Cuomo finalized his investigation by announcing that Ingenix ended its relationship with 12 health insurers, including the three largest insurers in the nation, along with the largest national and regional insurers operating in New York state.



Filed by Barbara Benson of Crain’s New York Business, a sister publication of Workforce Management. To comment, e-mail editors@workforce.com.


Stay informed and connected. Get human resources news and HR features via Workforce Management’s Twitter feed or RSS feeds for mobile devices and news readers.

Posted on October 29, 2009June 27, 2018

Study Recommends Integrating Workers’ Compensation with Non-Occupational Treatment


Integrating workers’ compensation medical benefits and non-occupational medical treatment under a “24-hour care” system could help pay for a “large fraction” of universal health care coverage, a study concludes.


Integrating occupational and non-occupational treatment would produce savings of $490 billion to $560 billion during the first 10 years, according to the report by researchers at the University of California, Berkeley.


“Savings would result from the much greater efficiency with which health insurance delivers care compared to workers’ compensation insurance,” according to the report released late last week that was funded by a grant from the Oakland-based California HealthCare Foundation.


“Only 12 percent to 14 percent of health insurance premiums go toward administration and profit,” researchers said in the report.


“Workers’ compensation turns this ratio on its head, spending the majority (50-60 percent) of premiums on these same overhead costs,” the researchers found. “Consequently, while occupational medical treatment represents a small portion of all treatment, the savings from integrating under private health insurance model would be substantial.”


The report, “Comparing the Costs of Delivering Medical Benefits Under Group Health and Workers’ Compensation—Could Integration Pay for Cover the Working Uninsured?” is available by calling (510) 643-0667.



Filed by Roberto Ceniceros of Business Insurance, a sister publication of Workforce Management. To comment, e-mail editors@workforce.com.


Stay informed and connected. Get human resources news and HR features via Workforce Management’s Twitter feed or RSS feeds for mobile devices and news readers.

Posted on October 29, 2009June 27, 2018

2008

F or 18 years, the Optimas Awards have recognized workforce management initiatives that directly improve business results. And every year, the judges see themes emerge from the entries they read and the companies that Workforce Management reporters write about and offer as companies worthy of consideration.


    One thing that this year’s winners have in common is resilience, a unique ability to roll with the punches—a characteristic that will likely be put to the test now that all organizations are facing a worsening worldwide economy. 


    Every organization is different, but among the 2008 winners are stories of a hospital fighting its way back from bankruptcy, a technology company battered by turnover, a health care organization challenged to better respond to patient demographics, and a food and facilities management services company that suffered a massive failure in recruitment process outsourcing. In each case, the organization looked to its own most precious resource—its people—for a solution. The hospital involved its staff, from the lowest-level worker to the top executive, in its recovery. The tech company decided that trust was the key to retention and created a pay scheme that gave more income security to workers. The health care organization ramped up its cultural competency to better serve its community—and improved its market share in the process. The food and facilities management services company created its own internal talent team and put the process back on the right footing.

    It’s our pleasure to honor the achievements of the 2008 Optimas Award winners, and to share them with you.


GENERAL EXCELLENCE
Crouse Hospital,
Syracuse, New York
The hospital pulled itself out of bankruptcy and has established itself as a leader in medical services in a highly competitive regional market by using its reorganization not only to fix its finances but also to reinvent its corporate culture.
COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGE
American Express,
New York, New York
Two years ago, American Express began a journey in its U.S. customer care organization to define and deliver a new employee value proposition to drive world-class retention, enhance its talent pipeline and engage each of its customer care professionals so they could deliver extraordinary customer care. The results achieved include highly qualified candidates with enhanced early performance, a significant reduction in attrition and improved customer satisfaction.

ETHICAL PRACTICE
Kaiser Permanente,
Oakland, California
Kaiser Permanente has a 30-year record of exceptional compliance with the Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs and has been recognized for its diversity management. But the not-for-profit health care organization went further by developing a strategic plan to ensure that diversity was expressed as a fundamental value of its corporate philosophy and behavior and was integrated into every aspect of its business.


FINANCIAL IMPACT
IBM, Armonk, New York
Applying the principles of supply-chain purchasing, IBM saved more than $1 billion with a workforce management initiative that cataloged the skills and experience of every employee worldwide into a searchable database. The end product has helped managers more easily find the IBM employees they need while also allowing the company to more efficiently hire contract workers.
GLOBAL OUTLOOK
ArcelorMittal, Luxembourg
ArcelorMittal is the world’s largest steel company, yet less than 15 percent of its 310,000 employees spoke the official corporate language—English. ArcelorMittal worked with GlobalEnglish, a company that specializes in online English-language learning programs, to implement a companywide English-learning initiative. So far, more than 5,000 employees have participated, with 500 new users added each month, opening avenues for employee global mobility and increasing productivity, thus saving the company more than $8.6 million annually.

INNOVATION
HCL Technologies,
Noida, India
HCL is one of the pioneers of the information-systems revolution in India, but it lagged behind competition in the IT services business, where it was a late entrant. HCL was confronted with the challenge of retaining people in the face of attrition that was much higher than its competition’s. HCL then embarked on its “Employee First” program, introducing several policies with a focus on inclusivity, teleworking, extended leave policies, flextime and a compressed workweek for female employees. All of these make HCL unique in its community and have helped it drop its attrition rate to below 15 percent as of July 2008.


MANAGING CHANGE
U.S. Department of Agriculture, Food Safety and Inspection Service,
Washington
The agency’s expanding role forced it to compete with other federal employers as well as those in the private sector for top talent in such fields as microbiology and risk assessment. But delays and inefficiencies in its HR systems affected the agency’s ability to perform. The department’s overhaul of its approach includes recruitment bonuses in hard-to-fill locations, efforts to address shortages in the veterinary field, a reduction in hiring delays, an increase in teleworking and other alternative work schedules, and efforts to link employee performance with the agency’s mission.
PARTNERSHIP
Metropolitan Development Association of Syracuse and Central New York,
Syracuse, New York
The association was formed by executives from more than 100 local companies in Central New York who realized they needed to stop the outflow of young talent from the area, which is home to 35 colleges and universities and has a workforce 20 percent more educated than the national average. It created the Essential New York Initiative, partnering employers and universities to retain students after graduation. The partnership is producing significant results, with regional employment reaching near-record levels in 2007.
SERVICE
Sodexo,
Gaithersburg, Maryland
Sodexo outsourced its recruitment process, but when that model failed, talent acquisition became the company’s No. 1 executive issue. The organization then created an in-house, best-in-class Talent Acquisition Group, with the goal of transforming Sodexo into a forward-looking recruiting powerhouse and magnet for top talent. As a result, the company’s retention rates for management and hourly workers are above industry norm, while customer satisfaction, client retention, employee referrals, quality of hire and college recruitment have seen significant increases.
VISION
Linn State Technical College, Linn, Missouri
A few years before the start of the energy crisis, Linn State began offering a nuclear technology program to train students for careers in nuclear energy. The two-year degree program attracts high school graduates and prepares them for careers with starting salaries around $55,000 a year in a field that is experiencing a resurgence but does not have enough trained workers to accommodate increasing capacity.

Posted on October 28, 2009June 27, 2018

Auto-Enrollment in Retirement Plans Could Crimp Savings, GAO Report Says


Automatic enrollment programs could inadvertently reduce defined-contribution plan participants’ potential retirement savings because they could have chosen a higher contribution rate on their own, according to a Government Accountability Office report.


“Some participants would have selected a contribution rate higher than the default rate had they not been subject to automatic enrollment and had they chosen to enroll in the plan voluntarily,” the GAO report says.


The report, conducted for Sen. Herb Kohl, D-Wisconsin, chairman of the Senate Special Committee on Aging, also said some automatically enrolled employees are likely to accept default investment funds, such as money market or stable-value funds, with “relatively low future prospects for return on investment.”


“Low default contribution rates and an apparent lag in the adoption of automatic escalation policies raise questions about the adequacy of long-term savings rates under automatic enrollment,” the GAO report says.


The GAO report also cites concerns that an Obama administration-backed proposal to require employers who aren’t already offering a retirement plan to automatically enroll workers in an IRA could undermine existing and the creation of new 401(k) plans.


“To the extent that the automatic IRA approach offers significantly lower costs—including the relative costs of fiduciary liability—employers may decide against adopting a 401(k) or may eliminate an existing one,” the GAO report says.



Filed by Doug Halonen of Pensions & Investments, a sister publication of Workforce Management. To comment, e-mail editors@workforce.com.


Stay informed and connected. Get human resources news and HR features via Workforce Management’s Twitter feed or RSS feeds for mobile devices and news readers.

Posted on October 28, 2009June 29, 2023

Short-Term Workforce Planning

Click image to enlarge. ▼
Adobe Acrobat required.



Workforce Management, October 19, 2009, p. 38 — Subscribe Now!

Posted on October 28, 2009June 29, 2023

Long-Term Workforce Planning

Click image to enlarge. ▼
Adobe Acrobat required.



Workforce Management, October 19, 2009, p. 40 — Subscribe Now!

Posted on October 28, 2009October 28, 2020

Special Report on HR TechnologyTalent Planning for the Times

Last year’s sudden financial crisis and the massive layoffs that came in its wake beg a question: Is workforce planning possible in any meaningful way?

It is, say firms that sell workforce planning software. Vendors such as Vemo, Infohrm and HumanConcepts pitch products designed to help companies prepare for the future of their workforces.

The tools, which tend to focus on either short-range or long-term planning, aren’t perfect. Over-reliance on data-crunching software can cause companies to lose sight of intangibles that are crucial to a company’s culture, for example. And as the recession demonstrates, business predictions are highly fallible.

But workforce management software is selling at a brisk pace. That’s partly because of a recession that took much of the world by surprise, vendors say. They argue that many firms responded to the downturn with crude people cuts that cost them key talent or handicapped their growth. Wisely implemented, workforce planning tools promise to help organizations handle variable business demand, says Brian Kelly, president of Infohrm for North America.

“We can’t predict economic downturns,” he says. “What we can do is help organizations manage through good and bad times.”

Planning strategies
Workforce planning software refers to applications that allow companies to forecast the number and kind of employees they will need at some point in the future. A cousin to succession management, which focuses on specific positions in a firm, workforce planning tends to home in on key job families or skills that will be required. In many cases, the tools let firms experiment with different scenarios, examining what workforce costs or risks may result from taking steps such as entering a new geographical market or eliminating a business unit.

 


“Having access to as much data as possible and being the owner of the data is a good thing toward achieving the goals of workforce planning.”
—Lisa Rowan, IDC


 

Vendors of workforce management software tend to fall into two categories. The first is short-term or operational workforce planning, meaning preparing for changes within months—such as a restructuring or merger.

HumanConcepts, Aquire and Nakisa offer products in this category, and each has a background in making tools for representing a firm’s employees graphically in organization charts.

Then there are longer-term, strategic workforce planning software providers. Their products are designed to help envision the workforce as far out as three to five years. Vendors involved with long-term planning include business software giant SAP, Aruspex, Vemo and Infohrm.

The amount of spending on workforce planning software is difficult to pin down. Workforce planning applications represent a nascent market, says Lisa Rowan, analyst with market research firm IDC.

“The vendor offerings probably address some but maybe not all of the eventual components,” Rowan says. Long-term planning is missing in most organizations, according to a recent report from research firm Bersin & Associates. In its March report, Bersin said 92 percent of companies have some level of workforce planning, but only 21 percent “take a strategic, long-term approach to addressing the talent demand, talent supply and the actions necessary to close the gap between the two.”

Bersin analyst Madeline Laurano wrote that organizations are, in effect, “bingeing on talent” when times are good and “purging talent” when times are tough. The approach is both costly and hurts the stability of the workforce, Laurano wrote.

“Looking for a more stable path, many organizations are now seriously thinking about workforce planning as a foundation for both a short-term fix and a long-term strategy,” she wrote.

Random cutbacks
Growing interest in workforce planning has to do with the way organizations have focused on their talent in the past couple years, says Cassie Barajas, chief performance officer at consulting firm Knowledge Infusion. Firms have worked harder to identify and retain key performers, she says.

“What we’re seeing right now is the importance of understanding who the workforce is,” she says.

That understanding is limited at the moment, according to a recent survey conducted by Knowledge Infusion and the International Association for Human Resources Information Management, a professional group. Just 48 percent of respondents said their company has necessary workforce data readily available to make immediate workforce decisions such as layoffs.

The figure suggests that much of the workforce cutting during the past year or so was less than thoughtful. Talented people were cut and companies sometimes slashed more than necessary, says Martin Sacks, chief executive of Bay Area-based HumanConcepts. Many laid-off employees eventually were hired back, and the net cost of the cutbacks was higher than it needed to be in many firms, Sacks says.

A sub-optimal experience with layoffs is a major reason firms are turning to workforce planning applications, he says. “Everyone’s coming out of the recession with a bad taste in their mouth, saying, ‘Wow, I don’t want to go through that again.’ ”

They appear to be putting their money where their mouths are. In late September, Sacks said HumanConcepts’ revenue for the three-month period of July through September was growing at a double-digit rate year over year, putting the company on track for its largest quarter ever in terms of sales.

It’s a similar story at New York-based Vemo, which has 20 employees and whose clients include Toronto-based media firm Rogers Communications, Atlanta utility firm Southern Co. and retail giant Sears. Vemo’s revenue doubled in 2008 and is on pace to double or triple this year, says chief executive Peter Louch.

 


Firms may want to categorize their positions into strategic roles. “The big thing here is that you are talking about work activities—roles—and not people.”
—Peter Louch. Vemo


 

San Francisco-based Aruspex also expects revenue to double this year. The 25-person firm, with clients including coffee chain Starbucks and insurance provider Aetna, raised nearly $4 million in financing last year. Aruspex CEO Howard Koenig says the firm might take in additional funding to fuel its growth. Already, investors appear to be champing at the bit. Koenig gets about a call a week from venture capitalists interested in his firm, he says.

There’s increased market awareness of workforce planning, says David Ludlow, SAP vice president of solution management for its HR software suite. SAP sells a joint product with software maker Nakisa. SAP also says clients can tackle workforce planning by combining different SAP products such as its core human resources management system and business intelligence analytical software.

Workforce planning is “potentially one of the next big things, like talent management has been,” Ludlow says.

Scanning the workforce landscape
One of the keys to long-term workforce planning is an “environmental scan.” That refers to considering the range of external factors that may affect a firm’s supply and demand for talent, such as regulatory, political or business trends.

Koenig says that in the energy sector, firms have to take into account the price of oil when predicting retirements. That’s because stock prices of employers are linked to oil prices, and at a certain price per barrel, older employees with significant stock holdings can be expected to exit their firms.

Once organizations figure out what data sources to include in their planning calculations and how to weight different factors, they typically lay out a number of scenarios and segment their talent. Vemo’s Louch says firms may want to categorize their positions into strategic roles critical for a long-term advantage; key roles crucial to short-term results; core roles that are marginally important to business priorities but are nonetheless necessary; and non-core roles that may represent places to cut or make more efficient.

 


There’s an increased market awareness of workforce planning. It is “potentially one of the next big things, like talent management has been.”
—David Ludlow, SAP


 

“It’s kind of like marketing,” Louch says, referring to the way firms cluster customers into different groups and plan marketing strategies accordingly.

Workforce planning strategies might look strange at first glance. Infohrm’s Kelly gives the example of an insurance firm that wants to trim its staff of $100,000-per-year underwriters to save costs, but wants to do so without threatening future growth.

By examining data on the performance and career paths of existing underwriters, Kelly says, an organization might learn that its best underwriters rise from the ranks of its own call center managers, who make $50,000 a year. Such internal promotions also save tens of thousands of dollars per underwriter in recruiting fees.

An optimal choice might be to cut underwriters now but load up on call center managers and actively shepherd them into the underwriting role over time.

At Greater Baltimore Medical Center, the main challenge in recent years has been retaining nurses. The 340-bed hospital experienced 18 percent turnover among bedside nurses a few years ago, says Mark Thomas, Greater Baltimore’s vice president of human resources and organizational development. That contributed to nursing shortages and the need to spend more than $6 million annually for pricey staffing agency nurses.

 


Workforce planning strategies should not remain static. “We’re constantly tweaking those plans. Don’t think that it’s a ‘once and done’ type of activity.”
—Nick Nyhus, Ameriprise


 

With the help of Infohrm’s consulting and technology, the hospital noticed particularly high turnover among new nurses. So it upgraded the onboarding process with better-trained coaches and the use of cohorts for new nurse graduates, which can create a sense of community. Partly as a result of these efforts, overall turnover among the hospital’s 1,100 bedside nurses has dropped to 13 percent, and spending on temporary nurses has fallen to “well under” $2 million, Thomas says.

An advantage of working with Infohrm, Thomas says, is that the vendor has taught his team how to do workforce planning largely on its own. Next up for the hospital is a project to apply workforce planning to its growing hospice unit. “We’ll be doing most of the work,” Thomas says.

Niche firm or big company?
Companies looking to buy a workforce planning application face a familiar issue: Should they go with a specialist or tap a more comprehensive business software provider? SAP’s Ludlow argues that his firm has an advantage when it comes to building sound workforce planning tools, because its software can tie directly into HRMS systems and other key applications, such as business planning software.

IDC’s Rowan says SAP has a point. “Having access to as much data as possible and being the owner of the data is a good thing toward achieving the goals of workforce planning,” she says. Rowan adds that time-and-attendance and scheduling information is important, especially for an hourly workforce. “Being able to visit historical staffing trends is needed.”

Niche providers counter that their systems can be configured to gather a wide range of data, including external sources such as Department of Labor information.

Another challenge related to workforce planning tools is trying to capture and preserve the positive facets of a firm’s culture. Simply focusing on key jobs or critical skills can blind a company to crucial factors, such as firmwide values, that ultimately translate into business success.

Vemo’s Louch, though, says it’s possible to account for the importance of cultural fit in different roles by considering performance review data, if those reviews assess workers partly on how well they embody corporate values.

Louch says it’s generally easier to launch a workforce planning initiative in an individual-oriented, quantitative culture. But, he suggests, workforce segmentation also can be done in an organization that is by nature more group- oriented.

“The big thing here is that you are talking about work activities—roles—and not people,” Louch says. “So even in egalitarian cultures, you may acknowledge that certain work activities drive greater immediate or long-term value for an organization.”

Then there’s the question of the overall power—or limitations—of workforce planning products. HumanConcepts’ Sacks says frequent use of his firm’s tool can help organizations avoid drastic cuts during tough times. Continually updating a firm’s talent structure to fit with business realities and goals, he says, is akin to driving a car with incremental turns of the steering wheel rather than a sudden swerve.

“You make lots of little changes as opposed to a big one,” he says.

That captures the philosophy at financial services firm Ameriprise Financial. The company, with about 11,000 employees, uses software from Infohrm to create workforce plans looking two to three years out. But those strategies are not static, says Nick Nyhus, vice president of talent management at Ameriprise.

“We’re constantly tweaking those plans,” Nyhus says. “Don’t think that it’s a ‘once and done’ type of activity.” Nyhus says workforce planning software helped as Ameriprise downsized during the recession, affecting approximately 300 positions. The company was able to get data quickly on matters such as how long positions had been open, which indicates talent scarcity, and average tenure in positions, which gave a sense of institutional knowledge at risk. The software saved Ameriprise weeks of data analysis, Nyhus estimates.

Still, there’s a danger in leaning too heavily on software that all but implies users have a high-tech crystal ball. Aruspex CEO Koenig suggests even the best tools rely on people plugging in sobering scenarios.

That was largely missing in the latest recession, with its abrupt drop.

“Everybody was so bullish and drunk on growth they didn’t model this scenario,” he says.

Workforce Management, October 19, 2009, p. 37-43 — Subscribe Now!

Posted on October 28, 2009June 27, 2018

Aussies Early to Workforce Planning Game

The workforce planning software that companies are gobbling up has strong roots in the land Down Under.


Two of the vendors selling long-range workforce planning applications—Aruspex and Infohrm—were started by Aussies. And, observers suggest, Australian organizations have been ahead of the curve when it comes to using workforce planning tools.


Australians’ early arrival to the workforce planning party has to do with labor market conditions that led to low unemployment, says Stacy Chapman, an Australian native who co-founded software firm Aruspex several years ago.


“Australia faces a few serious demographic challenges—low birthrates since the 1970s, and a remote island, so almost no illegal immigration—plus a history of very tightly controlled skilled migration,” Chapman says. “It is these low unemployment rates and an aging population which have made planning a priority.”


Aruspex is headquartered in San Francisco, but software development is done in Melbourne. The other workforce planning software company with Australian origins, Infohrm, is headed by CEO Peter Howes, who was on the academic staff at Queensland University of Technology in Australia and formed a precursor to the firm in 1982. Infohrm has operations in Australia, the U.K. and the U.S.


Australian federal government agencies were prompted to consider the future of their workforces some time ago, thanks partly to government policy that encouraged public-sector employees to retire at 54 years and 11 months of age, says Jaye Tanner, a consultant at Infohrm. Tanner, who served in the Australian departments of immigration and employment workplace relations earlier this decade, says Australians were attuned to the issue of the aging workforce by the 1990s. That’s earlier than most Americans or Europeans began focusing on the graying of the workforce and possible labor crunches.


“People were aware of workforce-labor issues,” she says. “Australians probably had to do that earlier on.”


Even recently, Australia has faced relatively tight labor markets. Australia’s unemployment rate was 5.5 percent in August, compared with a 9.6 percent rate in the U.S., according to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development research group.


Workforce Management, October, 2009, p. 40 — Subscribe Now!

Posted on October 22, 2009June 27, 2018

Employers Contributing Less to Retiree Pension and Health Care Plans


The value of employer contributions to retiree pension and health care plans fell to 6.9 percent of employee pay from 7.8 percent from 2002 through 2008, according to an analysis of 183 employers by Watson Wyatt Worldwide.


According to the analysis, the value of total retirement benefits provided by the 79 companies in the study’s sample that offered a defined-benefit plan throughout the study period dipped to 8.6 percent of pay from 9.4 percent between 2002 and 2008, mostly because of significant cuts in post-retirement health benefits, according to Arlington, Virginia-based Watson Wyatt.


For the 43 companies in the sample that switched to defined-contribution plans from defined-benefit plans during the study period, the value of contributions to retirement plans dropped to 5.5 percent of pay in 2008 from 8.7 percent of pay in 2002, according to the analysis, which was released Wednesday, October 21.


For the 61 companies in the sample that offered only a defined-contribution plan during the period, the value of contributions rose to 5.6 percent of pay from 5.3 percent, the analysis showed.


The analysis is available at www.watsonwyatt.com.


Filed by Doug Halonen of Pensions & Investments, a sister publication of Workforce Management. To comment, e-mail editors@workforce.com.

Stay informed and connected. Get human resources news and HR features via Workforce Management’s Twitter feed or RSS feeds for mobile devices and news readers.


Posted on October 22, 2009June 27, 2018

N.Y. Mayor Says Job Losses in City Not as Bad as Expected

Less than two weeks before New Yorkers decide whether to give Michael Bloomberg a third term, the billionaire mayor said Thursday, October 22, that the city’s job losses and pension and health care obligations would have been far worse if the city’s mayor had no management experience.


“We’re in a lot better shape than most cities and governments,” he told an audience in midtown Manhattan during a breakfast forum sponsored by Crain’s New York Business, a sister publication of Workforce Management.


The city has lost about 116,000 jobs since the financial crisis struck a year ago and now faces a $5 billion budget deficit. But Bloomberg, who is seeking a third term in office, said job losses were expected to be closer to 220,000.


New York City’s unemployment rate hit 10.2 percent in September, dipping from a 12-year-high of 10.3 percent in August.


Bloomberg’s Democratic opponent, city Comptroller William C. Thompson Jr., has criticized Bloomberg for paying more attention to the needs of Wall Street than middle-class New Yorkers.


“Mike Bloomberg has made our city a wonderland for Wall Street and a dreamland for developers while the middle class, small businesses, entrepreneurs and working families have been shut out and weighed down by the burdens of his misguided policies,” Thompson said in a speech to the Staten Island Chamber of Commerce this month.


Like many municipalities, New York has long-term pension and health care obligations toward its unionized workforce and retirees that threaten to bankrupt the city. Bloomberg said pension and health care costs now account for one-quarter of the city’s tax expenditures.


This year the city reached an agreement with the United Federation of Teachers that will save the city $2 billion in pension costs during the next 20 years. The agreement, which preserves benefits for current teachers but require new teachers to pay more into their pension plan for a longer period, still must be ratified by the state Legislature.


Still, Bloomberg said, “That agreement can be a model for other municipal unions.”


When pressed about whether he would ask city employees to forgo raises given to them earlier this year, Bloomberg said he would not because union contracts are enforceable by law.


Bloomberg also explained why, if elected, he would ask certain commissioners of city departments to step down from their posts.


“That’s what management is about,” he said. “You have to constantly shake things up.”


—Jeremy Smerd


Stay informed and connected. Get human resources news and HR features via Workforce Management’s Twitter feed or RSS feeds for mobile devices and news readers.



 

Posts navigation

Previous page Page 1 … Page 6 Page 7 Page 8 … Page 591 Next page

 

Webinars

 

White Papers

 

 
  • Topics

    • Benefits
    • Compensation
    • HR Administration
    • Legal
    • Recruitment
    • Staffing Management
    • Training
    • Technology
    • Workplace Culture
  • Resources

    • Subscribe
    • Current Issue
    • Email Sign Up
    • Contribute
    • Research
    • Awards
    • White Papers
  • Events

    • Upcoming Events
    • Webinars
    • Spotlight Webinars
    • Speakers Bureau
    • Custom Events
  • Follow Us

    • LinkedIn
    • Twitter
    • Facebook
    • YouTube
    • RSS
  • Advertise

    • Editorial Calendar
    • Media Kit
    • Contact a Strategy Consultant
    • Vendor Directory
  • About Us

    • Our Company
    • Our Team
    • Press
    • Contact Us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms Of Use
Proudly powered by WordPress