SCHWARTZ TO BE
"MISSED"
BY DC LABOR:
September 11, 2008
Longtime
labor ally Carol Schwartz - a Republican and the
sole labor-endorsed
candidate not to win in Tuesday's primaries - "will
be sorely missed by working men and women in the
District of Columbia," said Metro Council President
Jos Williams Wednesday. F
First elected At-Large Councilmember in 1984,
"The District has always been Carol's first love,"
said Williams, who praised her role as "a valuable
bridge between the conservative and liberal
communities here in Washington, as well as a
supporter of working families." That role was
especially clear in the recent passage of the Paid
Sick and Safe Days legislation, notes Mackenzie
Baris of DC Jobs with Justice, "when Schwartz was
able to win concessions from both supporters and
opponents to pass the landmark bill. It's
unfortunate that the business community sought to
punish Carol for the leadership she showed, instead
of appreciating that she helped put us on the
cutting edge of this issue."
Service Employees To Back
Schwartz, Cite Sick Leave Bill
By Nikita Stewart
Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, July 30, 2008; B04
Four locals of the influential Service Employees
International Union will endorse D.C. Council member
Carol Schwartz today for reelection because of her
support of a controversial bill that made the
District the nation's second city to mandate paid
sick leave for workers.
The locals, 32BJ, 500, 722 and 400, will announce
plans to help her with knocking on doors and
staffing phone banks in the Sept. 9 Republican
primary. Local 32BJ, which has 10,000 members in the
region, is the largest union for janitors and
security officers in the country.
"She helped us get this through, and we're going to
help her in her campaign," said Jaime Contreras,
capital area district director for Local 32BJ. "For
us, Carol Schwartz was a real partner in making sure
that workers in the District had benefits that
workers in the whole country should have."
Schwartz (R-At Large), who is seeking a fifth term,
faces a formidable challenge from Patrick Mara, 33,
a former U.S. Senate staff member who raised $50,000
in a matter of weeks among business leaders,
particularly parking magnates. Mara, who works as a
government relations consultant, also was endorsed
by the political arm of the powerful Greater
Washington Board of Trade.
Although Schwartz, 64, received a nod from the Hotel
Association of Washington D.C. political action
committee, she said she recognizes the business
community's continued resentment of the Accrued Sick
and Safe Leave Act.
The law bases paid leave for full-time and part-time
workers on a sliding scale. For example, full-time
employees at businesses with 100 or more workers get
seven days of paid sick leave, and employees at
businesses with 24 or fewer workers get three days.
The legislation became a tug of war between the
labor and business communities, with the D.C.
Chamber of Commerce leading the opposition for
businesses. In the end, wait staff and health-care
workers were exempted, and the number of days
granted to workers were reduced. Labor unions
considered the bill weakened but were impressed that
Schwartz did not abandon the legislation. If the
business community is coming after her for the bill,
"so be it," she said. "I'm very proud of that
legislation and the balancing act that I did."
But Mara said the legislation was not
well-researched and noted the lack of track record
because San Francisco is the only other city to
impose such a mandate. "Nobody looked at the costs
of sick and safe," he said. "Employers may have to
lay off people."
Mara said he wants to reduce the city's unemployment
rate, particularly in wards 7 and 8, and the city
can't afford to lose employers. "This is yet another
piece of legislation that makes it less likely that
businesses will locate here," he said.
James C. Dinegar, president and chief executive of
the Board of Trade, said that the organization
considered the sick leave bill "anti-business" but
that the endorsement of Mara reflects other concerns
as well, such as Schwartz's opposition to the school
takeover by Mayor Adrian M. Fenty (D). Mara has said
he would have supported the takeover. Schwartz, a
former school board member, said the city needed a
school board.
Both candidates have endorsement interviews tomorrow
with the Chamber of Commerce.