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October 30,
2007
For Immediate Release |
Contact: Albert O'Leary
PBA Communications Director
212-298-9190
or
Joseph Mancini,
212-298-9150 |
NYC SANITATION WORKERS EARN
MORE THAN NYC POLICE OFFICERS
Veteran
New York City sanitation workers assigned to household garbage
collection earn nearly $9,000 more than veteran police officers
who risk their lives fighting crime and terrorism — a situation
unprecedented and unparalleled anywhere in the country — PBA president
Patrick J. Lynch announced today.
Lynch
said: “New York City sanitation workers do an important
and difficult job
and they earn every dime the city pays them. But New York
City is the only municipality in the nation that pays the people
collecting household garbage more than they pay the people protecting
communities from crime and terrorism. During the period
for which the PBA is seeking a contract, the city advertised $57,392
as the basic maximum pay for veteran sanit workers while the reality
is that they earned $68,354 for picking up household waste because
of a little known $42 per shift collection and dumping bonus. That
is $8,766 more than police officers at top pay that earn $59,588
for risking their lives to keep our city safe.
“Various
Mayoral commissions have judged that NYC police officer’s
pay should be among the highest in the nation. But a system
of measuring work that puts police officer’s productivity
at a clear disadvantage has given us the nation’s highest
paid sanitation workers and the lowest paid police. Because
police work can’t be easily quantified, it has no value in
the city’s eyes. The end result is our officers earn
40% less than other local police and that is a clear violation
of the Taylor Law.
“The bottom line is that the NYPD can’t keep the police
it has because police pay at all levels is not competitive with
other police departments, besides being less than that of NYC sanitation
workers. Now is the time to fix that inequity.”
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