In 2009, twelve murders occurred in New Haven, Connecticut. By the next year, that number had doubled. Then, in 2011, that number shot up again—this time to 34 homicides. In a city whose population barely scrapes 130,000, the continually rising murder rate had many community members deeply shaken.
“It was overwhelming for people,” said New Haven resident Brian Wingate. To make things worse, he said, Mayor John DeStefano, a Democrat, laid off 16 police officers in early 2011. “Later on, he hired some back. But at the time it was just not good.”
Wingate decided something had to be done. He started talking to his neighbors, and found that their concerns echoed his. “It was jobs, it was crime, it was a lot of, ‘There’s nothing for the youth here in the city and things have to change,’” he said. That’s when Wingate decided that he was going to run for the Board of Aldermen, New Haven’s equivalent to a city council.
He approached his union, UNITE HERE Local 35, which represents custodial and service staff at Yale University. As a custodian at the university, Wingate had spent nearly two decades in the union, most of them as a shop steward.
“I said I’m running for alderman and I’d like some help,” recalled Wingate. “And they said: We’d like to help you. We know who you are.”
Other custodians from the union helped Wingate knock on doors in New Haven’s 29th Ward. They talked with Wingate’s neighbors about the crime rate, the unemployment rate, and the lack of youth support in the city. That fall, those same neighbors swept Wingate into office—along with 17 other pro-union aldermen. All told, three of the new aldermen were from UNITE HERE Local 35, and four were members of its sister organization, Local 34 (one was also a former Local 34 organizer). The new slate of aldermen also included community organizers, and members of the unions SEIU and AFSCME. On a council with only 30 members, unions and community organizations now held a supermajority.
In the year since, New Haven has cut its murder rate in half, in part through a new community policing program. The Board of Aldermen is working with New Haven residents, local businesses and various other organizations on a “jobs pipeline” which will funnel the city’s unemployed citizens into local jobs through a specialized training and assessment program. But to Alderwoman Tyisha Walker—the other member of Local 35 who took office after 2011—the new board’s greatest achievement has been transforming the way politics work in New Haven.
“I think we really changed the way things are being done,” she said. “We have more civic engagement. I get calls from constituents just because they want to know what’s going on downtown, or they have a problem they need assistance with.” Turnout at public meetings and forums has increased.
“I don’t think any of us expected to win quite that big,” said Laurie Kennington, president of Local 34. A resident of New Haven for 16 years, she said the coalition that is now driving local politics is “unique in that it’s a Board of Aldermen that comes from a lot of doorknocking, a lot of voter turnout, a lot of participation—rather than the old system of people getting tapped here and there.” While there were always opportunities for regular citizens to get involved, she said, it still used to be, “you kissed the ring, you got the office.”
Though unions such as Local 34 provided volunteers to knock on doors for the 2011 slate, both aldermen and union officials insisted that the new board was in no way a “labor government.” The candidates decided to run on their own, and represent a diverse range of community interests.
“We’re what the city looks like,” said Walker. “I represent my constituents, and I represent their views.” She described the 2011 sweep as a “people takeover” instead of a labor takeover.
“A lot of union members are on the Board of Aldermen and a lot of community members are on the Board of Aldermen,” said Kennington. “A lot of people active in their churches. It is unique in that it’s a coalition that comes out of community organizing.”









