State House Dome: SEA says it will endorse in both parties

Nov. 11—THE STATE'S LARGEST public employee union plans to play in both parties' gubernatorial primaries in the 2024 election.

This is a big change.

For decades, the State Employees Association (Service Employees International Union) Local 1984 has been a reliable supporter of Democratic candidates, not only for governor but often in legislative races as well.

But given there's an open seat, President Rich Gulla said union leaders are eager to "discover who will champion labor issues the most."

Credit outgoing Republican Gov. Chris Sununu for the shift.

For four straight elections, SEA leadership supported Sununu's opponents.

In 2016, the SEIU national parent organization spent several million dollars on behalf of Sununu's first opponent, former Executive Councilor Colin Van Ostern.

During Sununu's early tenure, the state went nearly two years without a collective bargaining agreement.

At the time, tensions between Sununu and the SEA ran high.

Then after he won an historic fourth term in 2022, Sununu opened the vault.

Facing a chronic labor shortage and a near-20% vacancy rate throughout state government, Sununu negotiated a bargaining deal that delivered pay raises of 10% and 2% over the next two years, the largest hike in state history.

"We face a myriad of challenges, but we are optimistic that we can build from the successes of Governor Sununu's bipartisan budget," Gulla said.

"We can continue his legacy with more historic and meaningful raises, as well as long-term, bipartisan solutions for properly funding the New Hampshire Retirement System while working with the leadership of the N.H. House and Senate."

On the retirement issue, the new governor faces a big decision — whether to undo a 2011 cut in retirement benefits that reduced the pension for 1,800 police and fire employees.

The SEA will be watching.

Patience ebbs on deal

For months, Executive Councilor Ted Gatsas, R-Manchester, has been respectfully harassing Administrative Services Commissioner Charles Arlinghaus about a closing date for a private development team's deal to purchase the former Laconia State School property.

The deadline to reach final consensus on a $21.5 million purchase and sales agreement already has been extended once.

Gatsas opposed the proposed sale last year, warning that the development team was not sufficiently capitalized to carry out this purchase.

A principal in the project, Robynne Alexander, owed back taxes on a stalled development effort in Manchester. Another principal investor had a Rye nursing home project go bankrupt.