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Hearing Held On Bargaining Bill
March 10, 2010 – A House Education and Labor Subcommittee held a hearing
March 10 on the IAFF’s national collective bargaining bill, HR 413, the Public
Safety Employer-Employee Cooperation Act, setting the stage for action in the
House.
The Subcommittee heard testimony from five witnesses who backed the measure -
including Jim Tate, president of Fort Worth, TX Local 440 - and two
representatives from the anti-union National Right to Work Committee and the
states’ rights-focused National League of Cities who opposed it.
Tate told the Subcommittee how collective bargaining has improved his department
since Fort Worth fire fighters won collective bargaining rights in 2007. He
said, "Withholding the right to collectively bargain is a denial of a measure of
fairness and dignity to fire fighters who put their lives on the line day in and
day out for the communities they serve.” Collective bargaining, Tate testified,
has put Fort Worth in a position to become the second contract in Texas to
guarantee safe staffing levels.
With a majority of both parties in the last Congress on record supporting the
bill, the opposing witnesses were a distinct minority, facing Committee
Democrats united in their support and Committee Republicans divided between
supporters and opponents. Right to Work spent most of its time blasting unions,
claiming that "the ultimate goal of this legislation is to force every fire
fighter and police officer in the country under union boss control.”
Representative Phil Hare (D-IL) took Right to Work to task for those attacks,
calling its language inflammatory and offensive.
Subcommittee Ranking Member Tom Price (R-GA) expressed his strong support for
collective bargaining rights for public safety officers, but expressed
reservations about whether the federal government should require states to enact
such laws. Chair Rob Andrews (D-NJ) countered that Congress has overwhelmingly
agreed that HR 413 gives the federal government a limited, reasonable role that
preserves state prerogatives. Andrews also recognized the tremendous work of the
bill’s prime sponsor and champion Representative Dale Kildee (D-MI) for his
determined work on the bill for the last 15 years.
“Today was the first step toward House passage of our national collective
bargaining bill. Now it’s only a matter of time until this bill finally passes
both houses and becomes law,” says IAFF General President Harold Schaitberger.
A vote in the Committee on Education and Labor is expected in the coming weeks.
Click here to watch an archived webcast of the hearing. The bill will be a
key issue discussed at the upcoming IAFF
Alfred K. Whitehead Legislative
Conference in Washington, DC.
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