• The Empire Gets Off The Couch, Waddles To Its Computer, And Strikes Bac

    From useapen@21:1/5 to All on Sun Apr 6 06:59:18 2025
    XPost: mn.politics, alt.government.employees, alt.politics.democrats
    XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, sac.politics

    The list of Democrat governors who treated Covid like an excuse to act
    like banana republic Generalissimos was a long one: Cuomo, Newsom, Whitmer
    and on and on.

    But Tim Walz may have punched well above his weight. He held emergency
    powers for almost eighteen months over a three months emergency; under his leadership, the state's public schools stayed closed for close to two
    years.

    But public workers really took home the rhetorical bacon; most Minnesota
    state white-collar employees have been working from home for five years as
    of this week.

    And it's caused problems. There've been stories of workers living out of state, even overseas, and occasionally fitting in another full-time job in
    the bargain.

    And it's caused other problems as well. Minnesota's capitol city, Saint
    Paul, has been famously sleepy for decades; it was atrophying even before
    the pandemic and - this is important - an exceedingly disproportionate
    share of Saint Paul's downtown was leased by state agencies. Which means
    even fewer people than normal eating lunch or socializing downtown even
    than the fairly dismal pre-pandemic numbers.

    In the meantime, Walz is taking flak and running damage control for
    squandering a $16 billion dollar surplus, increasing the state budget 40%,
    and leaving the state with a forecast deficit of $6 billion. State
    workers getting state benefits and state pensions while (let's be
    charitable) working at home is a dog that just don't play hockey (as,
    pinky swear, we say here in Minnesota. Look it up).

    So it's time for a change...maybe.

    Governor Walz has ordered state workers back to the office. He sternly scolded public employee unions for, in many cases, exploiting work from
    home rules, and upbraided them for stretching their hooky time to five
    years...

    ...oh, I'm just kidding. He ordered them back to the office for 50% of
    their scheduled hours, according to Minnesota Public Radio:

    The change to what had been a flexible telework arrangement was ordered
    this week by Gov. Tim Walz, who wants tens of thousands of executive
    branch employees back in person at least half of the time. It starts June
    1.

    It’s a departure from the remote arrangements that took root during the COVID-19 pandemic.

    Walz said the return to more in-person work will improve collaboration and communication and follows similar shifts in the private sector.

    For their part, local businesses are pretty happy (via KMSP-TV):

    "We’ve got thousands of people who are going to be coming to buy lunch,
    buy coffee, have breakfast, buy odds and ends that people need during the
    day. This is going to have a really fantastic impact. It’s going to be a
    shot in the arm for all these businesses that rely on customers that are
    in during the day," said St. Paul Downtown Alliance Joe Spencer.

    Yarusso Brothers on Payne Avenue in St. Paul has been serving authentic
    Italian food to the community for nearly a century. The manager said day-
    time activity never fully recovered after many workers left the office to
    work remotely during the pandemic.

    For their part, state workers are, well, not happy at all (this from WCCO-
    TV's Caroline Cummings):


    The state's two largest public employee unions, the Minnesota Association
    of Public Employees (MAPE) and the American Federation of State, County
    and Municipal Employees (ASFSCME), are having none of it:

    AFSCME Council 5 Executive Director Bart Andersen said, “Let me be
    perfectly clear: as Executive Director of AFSCME Council 5, representing
    more than 18,000 state employees, we will not tolerate unilateral changes
    to our members’ work. The Administration’s decision to impose sweeping workplace policy changes without engaging our union and labor partners
    first is not just unacceptable—it’s an act of blatant disrespect. Our
    union members must have and deserve a seat at the table every step of the
    way. We are demanding full transparency and meaningful dialogue
    immediately. AFSCME Council 5, alongside our fellow labor union partners,
    will do whatever it takes to defend our members’ rights, safeguard their ability to work safely and effectively, and continue delivering high-
    quality public services for all Minnesotans.”

    When they say "they will do whatever it takes", you can practically
    picture the litigators on both sides' eyes spinning like slot machine
    wheels.

    Now, Walz has been pretty much a lapdog for the public employee unions
    through his entire six years in office; it doesn't seem unlikely a sharp
    pull on his leash will get his attention, and likely concessions, as he
    heads toward what many say will be a run for a third term as governor, to
    set himself up for his national ambitions in 2028 (about which I wrote
    last week). He, and his DFL party, run on money from the trifecta of progressive plutocrats, non-profits and public employee unions; losing any
    leg of that triad is going to be a challenge.

    Fearless prediction: Walz gets them back into the office after giving
    them a big pay raise to avert a strike.

    https://hotair.com/mitch_berg/2025/04/03/the-empire-gets-off-the-couch- waddles-to-its-computer-and-strikes-back-n3801244

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