Gov. Andrew Cuomo dusted off his Tier VI pension proposal in the State of the State address yesterday and, not surprisingly, the state’s labor unions aren’t pleased.

The new, less generous pension plan for future state workers was proposed back in June, but failed to go anywhere in the year-end crush of legislation. While Cuomo is reviving the pension overhaul talk, labor leaders are reviving the same talking points opposing it.

“I’m completely against it and I think the other unions are too,” Ken Brynien, the president of the Public Employees Federation, said in an interview. “We just started another pension tier a few years ago, it saved $35 billion, I think $35 billion is enough.”

Brynien isn’t the only labor leader upset.

Watching the audience reaction during Cuomo’s speech, CSEA President Danny Donohue shook his head while the governor expounded on the possible savings from the plan.

Brynien, whose union of mostly white-collar workers went toe-to-toe with the governor during a tough contract negotiation that actually saw the rank and file reject the agreement before approving a revised one, said the cost savings just aren’t there.

“A new pension tier will not help people now, I think he should look elsewhere,” he said.