Financial History Issue 128 (Winter 2019) | Page 23

Treasury Secretary William Simon (left), Secretary of State Henry Kissinger (center) and Alan Greenspan, chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers, brief reporters aboard Air Force One on plans to stabilize sharp fluctuations in the value of the dollar, November 1975. quote journalist Theodore H. White. In presidential election years, it was a tradi- tion for both major candidates to attend and to share a stage for the last time before voters went to the polls. Instead of serious debate, they would trade short, jokey speeches poking fun at themselves and at each other, as though to reassure all present that no matter who won in November, everyone still belonged to the same club. In past years, John F. Kennedy, Richard Nixon, Dwight Eisenhower, Lyndon Johnson and Hubert Humphrey had all been featured speakers. Despite the desperate mood in the city, no one thought of canceling the 1975 event. Ella Grasso, the first woman governor of Connecticut, was the guest of honor. But her speech was to be the least-remem- bered aspect of the dinner on October 16. When New York Governor Hugh Carey left his office on Thursday afternoon to attend the Smith dinner, he was aware that the city did not have the money to cover the next day’s debt payments, but there seemed to be a plan to assemble it in time. The trustees of the Teachers’ Retirement System, the pension fund for the teachers’ union, were gathering that same evening to authorize the purchase of a round of the bonds of the municipal assistance cor- poration, a state agency (known as MAC) charged with raising money for New York. That purchase would, in turn, give the MAC board—scheduled to meet at 10:00 pm—the legal ability to release money for the payment of city debts. Carey had fully expected the Teachers’ Retirement Sys- tem to approve the MAC bonds. He had not, however, accounted for the intense unhappiness within the union about the direction of the city. The previous day, October 15, Mayor Beame had made public the first version of the city’s new financial plan as required by the Emergency Finan- cial Control Board (EFCB). It proposed to shrink the public sector in almost every way—closing hospitals, day care centers, fire companies and senior citizen centers; ceasing addiction treatment services; and limiting other social programs. According to the plan, the city could no longer afford an “expansive university system,” a “large and under-utilized hos- pital system,” or the spending that had grown out of the “federally sponsored social services revolution of the 1960s.” It could only accomplish the bare minimum expected of all city governments: police and fire protection, sanitation, sewage and the provision of potable water. “We can take no pride in the plan,” Beame wrote in a public letter to Carey, “because it places a higher priority at this time on the grim economic realities confronting the city, rather than the needs of our citizens. Unfortunately, this is a course that must be taken at this time in the interests of our economic survival.” The mayor’s announcement was hard for the city’s labor leaders to swallow. Among other issues, it would necessitate the layoff of thousands of union mem- bers without even the pretense of nego- tiation with the unions, which seemed an ominous sign for the future of collective bargaining. The Municipal Labor Com- mittee immediately issued a fierce public statement, saying that the only people who really understood what these cuts would mean for the city were the city workers themselves. “In the schools, hospitals, precincts, parks, libraries, youth centers, social, rec- reational and other agencies of New York City, we see firsthand how the fabric of life in this city is being irretrievably torn.” www.MoAF.org  |  Winter 2019  |  FINANCIAL HISTORY  21