According to 4Cs SEIU 1973 (4Cs) — the union representing more than 4,000 faculty at Connecticut’s community colleges, Charter Oak State College, and University of Hartford — Gov. Ned Lamont has privately warned the State Employees Bargaining Agent Coalition (SEBAC) that he won’t meet every demand in the upcoming contract negotiations. Union leaders are alarmed.
In a Sept. 19 email to members, 4Cs president Seth Freeman outlined faculties priorities, including lighter faculty workloads and more full-time hires. But the most striking revelation was what the governor has told SEBAC behind closed doors: the state cannot afford another four more years of guaranteed raises alongside sweetened health care and pension benefits.
Despite years of generous wage settlements, Freeman urged members to build “unprecedented power” this fall to press their agenda — signaling the union is unlikely to accept limits.
The Pension Push
Freeman’s email didn’t just preview the fight over salaries. It also spotlighted SEBAC’s long-term goal of rewriting their health care and pension perks.
Much of the fights centers on the Tier IV retirement plan, established in 2017 to control soaring pension costs. Tier IV is a hybrid plan — part defined benefit, part defined contribution — and, for the first time, includes a risk-sharing provision: if the fund underperforms its 6.9% investment target, employees, not just taxpayers, must temporarily increase contributions.
The safeguard worked as intended. After the fund posted a –10.85% return in 2022, employee contributions rose by 2% for one year. Unions quickly objected, arguing the surcharge hurt recruitment and retention, and contributed to short staffing across agencies. But when the fund rebounded in 2023, the surcharge disappeared automatically. For once, unions shared in the financial risk long borne exclusively by taxpayers.
Now, Freeman insists Tier IV must be “fixed” — a signal that unions want to roll back the only real fiscal safeguard left in the system.
Lamont’s Warning
Gov. Lamont’s private message to SEBAC is significant. The 2017 SEBAC deal locked pension and health benefits until 2027, meaning the governor has not had the chance to renegotiate those terms. Yet during his tenure, he has already delivered substantial for the unions including: six years of step raises and general wage hikes totaling 33% in compounded pay growth since 2019.
According to 4Cs, Lamont has now cautioned SEBAC that the state cannot afford four more years of automatic raises and benefit expansions. He citied rising health care costs and uncertain federal funding, as reasons those demands would be “difficult.”
The Bigger Agenda: Raiding Surpluses and Raising Taxes
Freeman’s email also revealed broader union priorities. He urged Lamont to move budget surpluses into an “off-budget account” to fund contracts and new public-sector spending, sidestepping Connecticut’s fiscal guardrails, which direct surpluses toward debt reduction and the rainy-day fund. But even unions acknowledge that surpluses won’t be enough. Freeman, called for rewriting Connecticut’s tax code to “end the regressive and upside-down tax policy” and raise revenue by taxing the “ultra-wealthy,” effectively turning temporary surpluses into a permanent justification for higher taxes and expanding obligations.
This isn’t about students or “services,” despite the rhetoric. The strategy is clear: redirect surplus dollars to union contracts and then cement the gains by raising taxes. Freeman’s email spells it out: using the surplus and raising taxes is, in his words, “the only way” they’ll win their demands and secure their healthcare and retirement.
Guardrails Under Siege
Connecticut’s fiscal guardrails were enacted to prevent a return to the state’s worst budget habits. By law, surpluses must be used to pay down debt and build reserves — not as windfalls for contract negotiations. Unions’ effort to dismantle these protections underscores why the guardrails are essential: without them, political pressure would quickly consume every available dollar.
Framing these demands as “fairness” masks their true impact: undermining fiscal discipline, expanding unsustainable obligations, and shifting costs back to taxpayers.
The Test for Lamont
Gov. Lamont’s warning to SEBAC is a rare acknowledgement that Connecticut cannot afford unlimited public-sector growth. The test will be whether he holds firm — or whether SEBAC’s “unprecedented power” campaign forces another round of unsustainable concessions.
For taxpayers, students, and state services already strained by rising costs, the stakes could not be higher.









