Commenter seanp mentioned this in my Calitics diary about the Obama Administration waiver for the Governor to cut In-Home Support Services salaries for health care workers:
When Obama was running as a Presidential candidate in 2007 he spent a few hours working with a home health care worker in Alameda, 61 year old Pauline Beck. Remember, this woman had a union contract:
While Beck’s life – struggling to make ends meet with two jobs and regular visits to the food bank – couldn’t be more different than the 46-year-old Democratic presidential candidate’s, she came away feeling “he just cares about people. … He wanted to know about me, yes, he did. He really wanted to feel what I did.”
I wonder how Pauline Beck feels about the Obama administration helping cut her wage from $12.10 an hour to $10.10 an hour. I guess she can get a third job.
Actually, according to Andy Stern, Pauline and IHSS workers like her will get cut back to $8 an hour. Several bigger bloggers and national groups are picking up on this story today. As Greg Sargent notes, Pauline Beck even spoke at the 2008 DNC. There’s video of the then-candidate’s visit with Pauline Beck.
Sargent confirms with SEIU that Beck would be hit by this reduction in wages, just two years after Barack Obama walked a day in her shoes. The Administration could have used the power of the purse – and the threat of pulling stimulus money away from California – to get the Governor to back off on these wage reductions. Instead, they acquiesced, and Pauline Beck, Obama’s former work buddy, will pay the price.
Brian Beutler of TPMDC has more on this, and Andy Stern has sent a message to his supporters asking them to call the Governor and stop the cuts, although the President is implicated in his message as well.
Two years ago, President Barack Obama walked a day in the shoes of SEIU home care worker Pauline Beck.
Today, Pauline and home care workers across California face pay cuts of up to 33% — from $12.10 an hour down to $8.
Governor Schwarzenegger’s belief that solving the state’s fiscal problems on the backs of those who take care of the most fragile among us is an absolute disgrace.
Please call the Governor’s office and tell him you strongly disagree with his misguided priorities:
916-445-2841
Earlier this week, Californians sent a clear message of no confidence in Governor Schwarzenegger — soundly rejecting his proposed budget reforms.
He proposed four ballot initiatives, and all four went down to overwhelming defeats.
The L.A. Times noted that some are beginning to write his “political obituary.”
It’s no wonder why.
Stern intimates that he will “file a challenge” against the Govenror’s decision. Maybe Schwarzenegger needs to walk a day in the shoes of these home health care workers- oh, wait, that didn’t work either.
How can we be paying people minimum wage and expect them to get by? The work that Pauline and others do is critical for Californians like Mr. Thorton. Perhaps the Governator needs to walk a day in her shoes and have the President come back for a refresher course.
…is fundamentally important for our state. Kudos to SEIU for pushing this. Obama made a major error here. Not exactly surprising, since so far he hasn’t shown much grasp of CA issues and since Larry Summers sure isn’t going to give him progressive advice.
But if we make Obama pay a political price for this, we can protect the rest of the stimulus rules from Arnold’s upcoming demands.