Gus & John

Tom Lehman TLEHMAN at lor.net
Fri Feb 5 18:32:58 PST 1999


Dear Doug,

Reports of this nature have been circulating since the mid-90's, some of them have been rougher on Sweeney and Bevona than this Newsday story.

Nothing like a couple of successful "leftist" janitors to defy gravity and carry things to an all new level. I'll bet Sweeney and Bevona both got a picture of themselves shaking hands with Karl Marx hanging on their office wall---who else but, leftists' could come up with a pay deal like they got. It makes the little fish like me down right ambitious.

Meanwhile, when these two famous democratic socialist janitors explain things to the rank and file I'll bet they hire Judith Butler as their ghost writer---or some other pomo wit. Btw, Stan the Man Arnowitz's new book doesn't look half bad from the reviews I've seen. Maybe a little prank did some good. Although, somehow I just can't see Dr. Arnowitz polishing urinals or pushing a broom.

Getting back to Sweeney and Bevona does anyone remember the James Baldwin story about Adam Clayton Powell.

Your email pal,

Tom L. :o)

Doug Henwood wrote:


> Janitors gave AFL-CIO boss hundreds of thousands
>
> Long Island Newsday
>
> February 4, 1999
>
> By William Murphy, STAFF WRITER
>
> The janitors' union local that gave ousted leader Gus Bevona a
> $1.5-million golden parachute has also paid hundreds of thousands of
> dollars over a 13-year period to its former president, John Sweeney, now
> the head of the AFL-CIO, according to records obtained by Newsday.
> Sweeney stepped down as president of the local, which represents
> building maintenance workers in New York City and Long Island, in 1981
> when he was elected president of the parent union, the Service Employees
> International Union.
>
> But he continued to draw a salary from Local 32B-32J of the building
> service union from the time he left, an AFL-CIO spokeswoman confirmed.
> The amounts were not available, but records filed with the U.S. Labor
> Department show that eight years later, in 1989, the local was paying
> Sweeney more than $80,000 a year. That dropped off to just under
> $70,000 in the ensuing three years, jumped back to almost $80,000 in
> 1993 and tapered off to just over $10,000 in 1994, the year before he
> was elected head of the AFL-CIO.
>
> A spokeswoman for Sweeney, Denise Mitchell, said he continued to
> take payments from the local after leaving because he went back
> periodically to help with local business, including contracts.
>
> The payments to Sweeney highlight how commonplace it is for labor
> leaders to double-dip, collecting large payments from both a local and
> parent union under the assumption they are working for both at the same
> time, even if the parent and local are headquartered in different cities
> and working on different issues.
>
> Officials of the SEIU and the AFL-CIO defended the payments,
> averaging more than $70,000 a year, arguing Sweeney was doing important
> work for the local even while running the international.
>
> Aides to Bevona, who was ousted this week as president of SEIU Local
> 32B-32J, had defended his combined salary of almost $500,000 on grounds
> that he worked hard for the local. Bevona, 58, of Babylon, headed a
> local representing 52,000 building maintenance workers in New York City
> and Long Island and an affiliated local representing 20,000 home
> health-care workers in the city.
>
> At the same time Sweeney was being paid by the local, Bevona was
> drawing a salary of more than $70,000 a year from the parent SEIU parent
> union for his work on behalf of the international.
>
> "It is double-dipping, plain and simple," said Ken Boehm, director
> of the National Legal and Policy Center, a Virginia-based advocacy group
> that monitors the federal government and unions on ethics matters.
>
> "I think it is an ethical abuse, and the proof of that is you rarely
> find it elsewhere," Boehm said. "I don't know of any government worker
> anywhere who draws two salaries."
>
> The Brooklyn-based Association for Union Democracy, a watchdog
> group, said such double payments were common in large labor unions, and
> usually were reserved for high-ranking leaders.
>
> Bevona's gross salary of almost $500,000 annually was paid by his
> local, a second affiliated local, a regional union council and the
> parent SEIU.
>
> The multiple payments mean that the more the money is spread
> around, the harder it is for an outsider to track it down," said Carl
> Biers, executive director of the association.
>
> The whole thing is that it is legal, but disgusting nonetheless,"
> Biers said. "You usually find that union leaders who take outrageously
> high salaries are usually insulated from the membership through
> intimidation or stolen elections."
>
> Bevona resigned this week amid allegations dissidents made in
> federal lawsuits that he had rigged a union election, hired private
> detectives to spy on union insurgents and improperly used union funds to
> defend himself in a lawsuit by the insurgents.
>
> In return for the resignation, insurgents Dominick Bentivegna and
> Carlos Guzman agreed to drop their claim against Bevona for monetary
> damages.
>
> Copyright 1999, Newsday Inc. </pre>
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