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Indiana state gov't begins layoffs after revenue drop

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33 state workers lost their jobs Friday.

Kevin Rader/Eyewitness News

Indianapolis - The state of Indiana has begun laying off workers in an effort to cut costs. Managers told 33 employees Friday that they will no longer have jobs.

Friday the 13th certainly lived up to its reputation for Phillip Giddens. He was one of the workers to be laid off Friday.

"I had absolutely no idea," Giddens said.

"This is a regrettable, but necessary, belt tightening in this challenging environment," said Mark Everson, Department of Administration.

Governor Mitch Daniels called for a 10 percent spending reduction for all state agencies last week.

"We will try our very best, if anyone is displaced, we will put them at the front of the line for any openings that do occur in state government," the governor said.

Since the state is cutting costs and has put capital projects on hold, Everson says there will be fewer projects to manage. Giddens was in charge of the greening of state government.

"I think before you start looking at eliminating people's jobs, you should eliminate those perks first," Giddens said. "I'm a little disappointed in this governor that he doesn't think more of the human capital instead of going right to layoffs."

Giddens said, for example, some state employees use their take home vehicles to commute from as far away as Bloomington, north of Lafayette and Terre Haute at taxpayer expense.

Everson says these cuts will save the state $1.6 million annually and by acting now, the Department of Administration will save an additional $900,000 this fiscal year. These 33 job cuts runs the total number of job cutbacks to 50 since the first of the year, which represents a 19 percent cut in workforce.

"It's not an easy conversation, but people I suggest to you, understand that the state can't print money and this is a prudent thing to do, given the revenue shortfall," Everson said.

"If this administration is willing to cut jobs this cavalierly, I think this is just the beginning, not the end," Giddens said.

So when Giddens went to work, it was just Friday the 13th. When he went home on his last day after five years, it was something else.

"We started terming it 'Bloody Friday'," he said.

Not everyone got the news about the cuts today, some will hear about their jobs next week.

From the Associated Press:

Indiana's Department of Administration has laid off 33 workers because of dwindling state revenues, the department's commissioner said Friday.

About 12 of those worked on capital projects that have been put on hold, while others maintained Indiana Government Center facilities or worked with the state's vehicle fleet, said

Commissioner Mark Everson. Some of them will work their last day Friday, and others will finish up in the next two weeks.

Everson said the layoffs would save the state $900,000 during the current fiscal year that ends in June, and $1.6 million annually.

"This is a regrettable but necessary action given the difficult circumstances facing the state," Everson said.

Gov. Mitch Daniels last week ordered state agencies to cut costs by 10 percent during this fiscal year. Daniels has also offered voluntary unpaid leave to workers and denied them annual pay raises.

State tax collections fell $309 million below expectations during the first four months of the fiscal year. Daniels, a Republican, said that without cuts the state's surplus - which stood at $1.3 billion in July - would be wiped out by next August.

He indicated earlier this month that he had hoped to avoid layoffs among the state's 30,000 employees.

Daniels' spokeswoman Jane Jankowski said Friday that she knew of no other layoffs but that more were possible.

"Of course the governor is very hopeful that agencies will do all they can to minimize separations," she said.

David Warrick, the leader of the union that represented state employees before Daniels took office in 2005 and stopped their collective bargaining rights, said he did not recall any state government employee layoffs in the last 30 years and that the state should find other ways to cut costs.

"When times are tough, you need the public services," said Warrick, executive director of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, Council 62.

Everson said about 17 people have left the Department of Administration since he became commissioner in January and that with the layoffs his department will be down to 209 employees - a loss of about 20 percent of staff.

"We're just slimming down in every way we can to reduce costs," Everson said.

The Department of Administration oversees state purchasing, the state vehicle and aviation fleet, real estate transactions and the Government Center campus in downtown Indianapolis. The department is also hoping to save money by consolidating some government offices and reconsidering leased office space around Indianapolis.

The state's two-year budget enacted in June cut most agency spending by 10 percent from the previous budget, and now agencies must reduce spending by another 10 percent. Daniels has said individual agency heads have the freedom to determine how the cuts are made.

The state's largest agency, the Family and Social Services Administration, said it does not plan to lay off any of its 4,800 workers. It does plan to leave about 400 positions vacant, however, to save money.

(Copyright 2009 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.)

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