At a celebration throughout SOMOS, the annual Puerto Rico getaway for New York’s political class, District Council 37 government director Henry Garrido proudly launched Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani to a packed out of doors crowd on the Caribe Hilton of jubilant union officers, political insiders and authorities lobbyists.
Simply days after Mamdani’s election, the public show of help from the union chief — highlighted with a hug — underscored the rising alliance between the incoming mayor and the chief of New York Metropolis’s largest public-sector union.
That bond is about to be examined, or at the very least leaned on greater than ever earlier than, as Mamdani and his still-forming staff put together to craft a brand new collective-bargaining settlement whose wages and advantages will ripple throughout each municipal union in New York Metropolis.
As Mamdani prepares to ship on his mandate to uplift New York’s working class and his affordability agenda, whereas engendering a renewed religion in what he has referred to “public excellence,” the democratic socialist should additionally cope with the work of being a boss to town’s 300,000 civil servants, full with robust selections and compromises as town faces a troublesome fiscal outlook.
For greater than a century, New York Metropolis labor negotiators have relied on a system referred to as sample bargaining. That system, which isn’t required by regulation, makes use of one union to strike a deal on wages, well being care, and different advantages that then turns into the baseline for each different municipal union. Which union units that sample is a matter of intense consideration and maneuvering throughout town’s labor panorama.
Historically, Metropolis Corridor has pushed for DC 37 or the United Federation of Lecturers — the 2 largest civilian unions — to determine the sample.
There’s additionally the matter of the contentious new well being advantages plan for metropolis staff and a few retirees, designed to cut back prices some $1 billion yearly as a part of a union-management well being financial savings pact in prior bargaining. It’s scheduled to enter impact the day Mamdani is sworn in however is the topic of lawsuits in search of to cease the change.
His administration additionally wants to maneuver to barter a brand new contract with DC 37, which expires subsequent yr.
“Most mayors inherit this problem,” Joshua Freeman, a labor historian and professor emeritus at Queens School, instructed THE CITY. “There’s labor broadly, after which there are municipal unions with contractual relationships that should be labored out. Mamdani hasn’t stated very a lot about that aspect of labor in any respect, however his administration goes to should cope with it.”

A few of Mamdani’s first appointments point out he’s prone to lean closely on former authorities officers with years of expertise — and a few baggage.
On Monday, he appointed Robert Linn as one of many 400 members of his expanded transition staff. Linn served as commissioner of town’s Workplace of Labor Relations through the begin of the administration of former Mayor Invoice de Blasio. He additionally had that identical function for Mayor Ed Koch and has labored within the non-public sector because the Police Benevolent Affiliation’s chief negotiator through the administration of former Mayor Michael Bloomberg.
Over time, he’s been concerned in contentious labor negotiations which have upset rank-and-file union members and retirees.
One open query is whether or not Mamdani will select to maintain town’s prime labor negotiator, Renee Campion, on board. The longtime head of town’s Workplace of Labor Relations, Campion is the first foe of the unions bargaining immediately with town.
Dean Fuleihan, Mamdani’s decide for first deputy mayor, dodged questions from THE CITY about whether or not Mamdani meant to ask Campion to remain in his administration.
“We’re working by means of all personnel selections and also you’re seeing the mayor-elect announce them and we’re going to proceed to take action,” Fuleihan stated at a Starbucks Staff United picket line in Decrease Manhattan final week.

Mamdani has stated he needs to rent 1,000 new lecturers per yr and maintain the police division’s headcount at its present ranges, and has pledged to elevate the minimal wage to $30 an hour by 2030, which might become a boon for town’s lowest-paid civil servants, a lot of whom earn the minimal wage. He has additionally promised to work with state lawmakers to reverse sure points of Tier 6, the unpopular reform accredited in 2012 that slashed pension advantages for future public staff and raised their retirement age.
However he has dodged a few of the thornier points within the public sector all through the marketing campaign path as he courted the endorsements of town’s highly effective unions. Chatting with an viewers of rank-and-file DC 37 members at a February candidates’ discussion board, Mamdani stated he was “undecided” if he supported eradicating residency necessities for metropolis staff — drawing some mild boos from the gang, the one damaging response he obtained through the two-hour occasion.
DC 37 has lengthy pushed to permit its members to stay outdoors the 5 boroughs. Town’s cops and firefighters are allowed to reside in close by counties.
Nonetheless, DC 37 finally endorsed Mamdani within the main as a part of a ranked-choice slate led by Metropolis Council Speaker Adrienne Adams, and shortly lined up behind him within the common election.
Mamdani has additionally confronted pushback from retired metropolis staff, a lot of whom don’t stay in New York Metropolis. At challenge was one other piece of the union-management well being financial savings pact: a proposed transfer to inexpensive Medicare Benefit, fiercely opposed by retirees.
Although he stated all through his marketing campaign that he didn’t help the change, Mamdani declined to signal a pledge from the principle retiree group that opposed the switchover forward of the first, drawing scorn from advocates.
Now he should decide up the items, after Mayor Eric Adams determined to scrap the Medicare Benefit change, leaving Mamdani and the unions with the duty of methods to exchange $600 million in pledged annual well being care financial savings.
These financial savings have been supposed to assist enhance a key fund that covers some advantages and has reportedly run dry. Along with the $1 billion in projected financial savings beneath the well being plan for energetic metropolis staff that’s slated to enter impact on Jan. 1, the 2 offers have been meant to deliver that fund again to solvency. The group representing the 102 public sector unions and town are presently locked in a authorized battle over who’s answerable for the fund.
Although Mamdani hasn’t stated how he plans to bridge the hole now that Medicare Benefit is lifeless, his current appointments might present some clues. Fuleihan served a key function in laying the groundwork for the well being financial savings plan in 2014, when he was then-mayor de Blasio’s finances director. Linn was labor commissioner on the time.
On Tuesday, Marianne Pizzitola, the outspoken head of the NYC Group of Public Service Retirees, stated she is anxious with Mamdani’s newest appointments. She stated Mamdani’s marketing campaign ignored her requests to fulfill after an preliminary digital assembly initially of the yr.
Fuleihan and Linn, she stated, have been “orchestrating these offers of leveraging well being care — that’s a priority for me.”
“He’s employed the identical folks that have made these poor selections up to now, I don’t have any consolation stage that they’re not going to information him on the trail that they have been on that they took with the earlier mayors,” added Pizzitola.
Mamdani’s transition has not responded to requests for remark from THE CITY.

