lohud.com

Sponsored by:

Public Employees Say They Can Do The Job — And Cheaper

May
8

The New York State Public Employees Federation (PEF) said today that the state could save $750 million over the next three years if it stopped using as many private consultants and handed the work over to public employees.

“Everyone is quick to throw out the popular and overused phrase ‘hiring freeze’ to solve the state’s budget gap,” PEF President Ken Brynien said in a statement. “Our report, based on research from the Office of the State Comptroller (OSC) proves the real savings is in a consultant freeze.”

PEF put out its research that showed that more than 23,000 private consultants are employed by state agencies at an estimated cost of $704 million in the 2006-07 fiscal year.

“Compounded over three years, our plan, which calls for eliminating about half of all consultants, would save state taxpayers $765 million,” Brynien said.  “Half or more of the savings could come just by replacing information technology (IT) and engineering and architectural consultants with state employees. ”

PEF is the state’s second-largest state-employee union, representing 58,000 professional, scientific and technical employees.

This entry was posted on Thursday, May 8th, 2008 at 10:43 am by Joseph Spector.
You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed.
Share and Enjoy: del.icio.us Digg Furl Reddit Google StumbleUpon Technorati Yahoo! | Print This | Email This Email This

Advertisement

Leave a Reply

About this blog
Politics on the Hudson, from The Journal News/LoHud.com, is your online source for up-to-the-minute political news, insight and dish in the Lower Hudson Valley and New York state. Contributors to the blog include reporters and editors from Westchester, Rockland and Putnam counties, as well as Albany and Washington.

Subscribe
Politics on the Hudson Podcast

Daily Blog Email Updates


The Authors



Advertisement
Other recent entries

Links

Recent Comments


Advertisement


Recently Updated LoHud Blogs
Monthly Archives