-Caveat Lector-

--- In [EMAIL PROTECTED], "Robert Lederman" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

Giuliani fired former welfare mothers on last day in office

by Robert Lederman

(see NY Times article below my comments)


"City welfare chief Jason Turner apologized Friday for unwittingly
using a Nazi death camp slogan ["work shall make you free" - the
motto on the gates of Auschwitz] to defend Mayor Rudolph Giuliani's
workfare program." - Newsday 6/27/98 Apology For Holocaust Allusion

Some times small actions tell a larger story. On his last day in
office while going from tribute to tribute to his compassionate
greatness, Rudy Giuliani found the time to fire 3,500 former welfare
mothers who were part of his workfare program.

These are people Giuliani forced off welfare and then lied about
finding good jobs for. Giuliani's welfare chief, Jason "work shall
make you free" Turner learned his craft in Wisconsin studying at the
feet of Charles Murray, author of "The Bell Curve". Wisconsin's
welfare reduction program like NYC's was significantly influenced by
Charles Murray's books. Murray was also a paid consultant to former
Wisconsin Governor, Tommy Thompson.

"The Bell Curve" is a modern classic of eugenics which advanced the
idea that blacks are genetically inferior, crime-prone and therefore
unworthy of government help. It was written while Murray was a
resident scholar at the Manhattan Institute. Many of the studies used
in it were financed by eugenics groups with ties to Nazi Germany and
Hitler.

Charles Murray, Giuliani's Welfare Commissioner Jason Turner,
Tommy "Homeland Security" Thompson and the newly crowned civic-saint
Sir Rudy Giuliani are all intimately linked - as is GW Bush - to the
Manhattan Institute, a Rockefeller-funded think tank founded by
former CIA director, William Casey.

For more about their ties to the Manhattan Institute and eugenics see
http://baltech.org/lederman/

NY Times 1/5/2002

January 5, 2002

City Fires 3,500 Former Welfare Recipients

By NINA BERNSTEIN


On the last day of the Giuliani administration, the city's departing
welfare commissioner ordered the dismissal of more than 3,500 former
welfare recipients now working at union wages for the city parks
department, and withdrew the promise of such jobs from about 1,200
others who were reaching their federal welfare time limits last month.

The dismissed workers will be referred to a temporary staffing agency
that was given a contract in October to place people who have reached
their welfare time limits in transitional jobs in government
agencies. But under the contract, the parks workers, now making $9.38
an hour, would be paid $7.95 to do the same work.

Last year, the parks department rejected a similar arrangement as a
violation of city labor law, and it is unclear whether any of the
workers will be able to reclaim their jobs, even at lower wages.

"We will be converting to a program wherein all future referrals will
be employed as temporary staff through a temporary staffing company,"
the commissioner of human resources, Jason Turner, wrote to the parks
commissioner, Henry J. Stern, in a letter dated Dec. 31.

The letter is causing consternation at the Parks and Recreation
Department, where administrators and union representatives alike
opposed a similar proposal Mr. Turner made late last year to shift
the federally subsidized parks workers to a temporary employment
agency.

With no one named yet to succeed Mr. Stern, department officials
would not discuss the issue on the record. But Mark Rosenthal,
president of the union local that represents seasonal parks workers,
echoed administrators' private expressions of dismay.

"They want to profiteer off the misery - bring them here and pay them
even less than $9.38 an hour, and put a middleman in between," Mr.
Rosenthal said. "These are all single mothers with children. I don't
see where it helps them to get less and no union benefits."

Mr. Turner's last-minute legacy is now part of a larger re-evaluation
by the Bloomberg administration: how to handle the veteran welfare
recipients who have served as the city's shadow work force. Their
value to the city will increase in a time of cutbacks and deficits,
primarily because they can be paid mainly out of a federal welfare
fund rather than city and state treasuries.

At the parks department, for example, the regular staff has dwindled
to 1,900 from a 1986 high of 4,900, and the agency can ill afford to
lose the 3,500 subsidized workers. Many of them began cleaning parks
and supervising playgrounds last March, in renewable jobs lasting 11
months and two weeks.

"We have temporarily ceased our efforts to provide publicly
subsidized jobs in order to re-evaluate the current program," Debra
Sproles, the spokeswoman for the city's Human Resources
Administration, said in a statement issued this week after
consultation with the new welfare commissioner, Verna Eggleston.

"More specifically, H.R.A. is reviewing the program in terms of
funding availability and identifying the appropriate balance between
the jobs offered in the public versus the private sector."

Ms. Sproles said Mr. Turner was in Wisconsin and unreachable there.
But she confirmed that the temporary staffing agency is a TempForce
franchise in Brooklyn.

According to a copy of the contract, the franchise, backed by
Randstad, its Amsterdam-based corporate parent, was the low bidder on
a $578 million, three-year contract to employ up to 10,000 people
reaching their welfare time limits. The contract has been funded at
the level of $75 million in federal money. All the job categories
being offered, including clerical, food service and janitorial, pay
$7.95 an hour.

The franchise is owned and operated by Annette Donaldson, a former
resident of Howard Beach, Queens, where she was also known as Annette
Rocca. She now runs the Brooklyn operation from her home in Boca
Raton, Fla., according to a spokeswoman, Carolyn Doyle.

The subsidized parks job program has always included coaching to help
place the workers in private sector jobs, but most lack a high school
diploma and a driver's license, and opportunities at the union wage
level are even scarcer in a recession, parks managers said.

More troubling to welfare lawyers is that in October and November,
when the city called in more than 10,000 welfare recipients who were
nearing their time limits, it offered the parks jobs in lieu of a
transition to Safety Net Assistance, the state-financed alternative
for which most families were eligible. It now appears that by then,
Mr. Turner had already contracted with TempForce, and people who
accepted the parks jobs were cut from the welfare rolls - as were
those who refused the offer.

"It seems to us particularly unfair to change the rules of the game
in midstream," said Marc Cohan, a lawyer with the Welfare Law Center,
a national advocacy group. He added that the replacement of seasonal
union workers with temporary staff members paid using welfare money
might violate state provisions.

Federal, state and city laws ban the use of welfare money to displace
regular employees, and several lawsuits are already pending against
the city on the issue. Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg's call for 20
percent cuts by most city agencies is likely to sharpen existing
concerns about worker displacement.

Betsy McCormack, a spokeswoman for the state Department of Labor,
said, "H.R.A. has indicated to us that they are re-evaluating their
program and we are working with them to ensure that displacement of
workers does not occur."


Newsday 8/18/89 Holocaust `Reminder' Claimed

"A concentration camp survivor who witnessed the murders of his
parents and five siblings at Auschwitz claimed that during
questioning after his arrest on bribery charges he was placed before
a blackboard bearing a Nazi slogan by former U.S. Attorney General
Rudolph Giuliani's office as part of an attempt to "break"
him...Written on the blackboard was the German phrase "Arbeit Macht
Frei." The slogan, "Work Shall Set You Free," adopted by the Nazi
party, appeared over the gates at Auschwitz."


Newsday 6/27/98 Apology For Holocaust Allusion

"City welfare chief Jason Turner apologized Friday for unwittingly
using a Nazi death camp slogan ["work shall make you free" - the
motto on the gates of Auschwitz] to defend Mayor Rudolph Giuliani's
workfare program."


"I take a different view of someone comparing me to Adolf Hitler than
when someone calls me a jerk." Mayor Giuliani, N.Y. Daily News
10/25/1998
--- End forwarded message ---

<A HREF="http://www.ctrl.org/";>www.ctrl.org</A>
DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic
screeds are unwelcomed. Substance—not soap-boxing—please!  These are
sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'—with its many half-truths, mis-
directions and outright frauds—is used politically by different groups with
major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought.
That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and
always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no
credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
========================================================================
Archives Available at:
http://peach.ease.lsoft.com/archives/ctrl.html
 <A HREF="http://peach.ease.lsoft.com/archives/ctrl.html";>Archives of
[EMAIL PROTECTED]</A>

http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/
 <A HREF="http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/";>ctrl</A>
========================================================================
To subscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SUBSCRIBE CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To UNsubscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SIGNOFF CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Om

Reply via email to