The International Brotherhood of Teamsters hopes to
consolidate resources and expand its base in Pennsylvania by forming a
statewide association of law enforcement and correctional officers, Teamsters
leaders announced Thursday.
The Pennsylvania Law Enforcement and Correctional Officers
Association will bring together the locals representing more than 100 county
and municipal agencies and more than 2,000 police, deputies and prison guards
statewide.
The association "will provide an increased level of
representation and protection that is unmatched in our state," said Bill
Hamilton, president of the Pennsylvania Conference of Teamsters.
The announcement came at a press conference in King of Prussia,
just a few miles from the Montgomery County Correctional Facility where 235
prison guards will vote Monday on joining Teamsters Local 384.
Hamilton said prisons are an area ripe for expansion.
"We believe these correctional facilities, in
particular, have a real meaningful future in the state of Pennsylvania because
they're largely unrepresented in many, many areas," he said.
Leaders of the state Fraternal Order of Police attended the
press conference and said afterward that they applaud the Teamsters' attempt to
expand its guard unions.
"But when it comes to the representation of police
officers, we strongly believe the only representation that can be given is by
police officers themselves," said Pennsylvania FOP President Les Neri.
Neri said that although the Teamsters represent many smaller
police departments in Western Pennsylvania, the FOP would continue to dominate
urban departments and most of Southeast Pennsylvania.
"Imagine a Teamster police officer pulling over a
Teamster truck driver," Neri said, adding that the appearance of a
conflict of interest justifies keeping police officers separate.
Carl Bailey, a former McKeesport, Pa., police detective who
leads Teamsters Local 205 outside of Pittsburgh, said he respects the FOP.
"I wish we had a better relationship because I think we're all fighting
for the same things," he said.
However, Bailey doesn't see police departments as FOP
territory. In fact, he said, his staff was working Thursday to bring in another
department from Fayette County.
"Hopefully that'll be my 51st police department coming
onto my local," he said. "It's a growing industry."
Teamsters Local 384 organizer Chris O'Donnell said the
Teamsters "need to get more of a presence" in correctional facilities
across the state.
"It's very prevalent in Harrisburg and the western part
of the state," he said, but there's a "dire need" in Montgomery
County and other areas.
Teamsters leaders said there is no effort yet to organize
prison guards in Chester County or Delaware County, where two African American
guards are suing the operator of the county facility for alleged racial
discrimination.
Source: Philly.com
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