The NH STate Employees Association sent the attached fliers to VSEA, one promoting a March 31 rally in Concord and the other listing the locations of shuttle buses from the VT/NH border to Concord.
"But by taking power into their own hands, slowing down a race to strip workers of their fundamental rights, and fully representing their constituents by allowing real debate and discussion to take place, lawmakers in Indiana, like their counterparts in every state in the nation, are demonstrating that the momentum and popular support in the states is behind those standing up and fighting for the middle class."
"Why should public workers’ pension benefits be reduced to resolve the funding gap when they aren’t the fundamental cause of it in the first place? Why not make those who created the pension funding gap pay—the hedge funds, banks, insurance companies, and other financial institutions that were responsible for the massive investment losses and the pension fund managers who negligently risked workers’ pensions? Or the politicians who let them?"
The comment is attributed to…Rep. Neal Kurk of Weare who, according to WMUR, said the following: “The problem with the N.H. Pension System is that people live too long. We’d be better off if we could get [public employees] to pick up smoking and they would die younger.”
Again, how low will these people go?
"To be fair, Mr. LePage does retain a sense of workplace opportunity. After his election last November, he named Lauren, his 22-year-old, fresh-from-college daughter, to what was termed an entry-level job as assistant to the governor’s chief of staff. At $41,000 a year, the post offers $10,000 more than the pay for workers who pass the teacher and police tests. That’s on top of Ms. LePage’s free room and board at the governor’s mansion."
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