PHILADELPHIA Even after a five-year impasse, the tentative
contract agreement between the city and AFSCME District Council 47 looks like a
classic labor compromise, with both sides gaining and giving ground on
different issues.
That makes it a political godsend for Mayor Nutter, who had
become the favorite whipping boy for the city labor movement and is still in a
standoff with the biggest municipal union, District Council 33.
The city is set to resume negotiations Friday with D.C. 33
and its president, Pete Matthews. The big question facing all sides is whether
the D.C. 47 settlement will point the way to compromises that will get the
other talks off the dime.
"This is all I'm going to say about that: All contract
negotiations are different," Matthews said Wednesday. "Police is
different from Fire, D.C. 33 is different from D.C. 47."
Members of D.C. 47 - about 3,600 social workers, librarians,
registered nurses, computer technicians, and other white-collar workers - have
gone close to seven years since their last general wage increase, in mid-2007.
But over the next three years, they'll see some bigger
paychecks.
Under the tentative agreement, awaiting a union confirmation
vote next week, they will get a $2,000 signing bonus and three raises in the
next three years (of 3.5, 2.5, and 3.5 percent). On top of that, younger
members will see their pay levels boosted by five years worth of step
increases, and virtually all the older members will get a boost from longevity
pay.
The administration estimates the total cost of the package
at $122 million over the next five years, an average of $34,000 for each
covered member. But the costs are heavily back-loaded, so the next mayor taking
office in 2016 will have to come up with more of the new money than will
Nutter.
In the end, Nutter's negotiation team relented on two issues
it had described as important - a bid to force newly hired members into a
hybrid pension plan with lower guaranteed benefits and reduced costs, and an
effort to change employment rules to permit furloughs of up to three weeks a
year.
On the pension front, the mayor settled for an optional
hybrid program, and bigger pension contributions from employees who choose to
stay in one of the older, more expensive city pension plans providing more
generous, guaranteed benefits.
Shannon Farmer, the city's chief labor negotiator, said the
city believed newer, younger employees might be planning shorter municipal
careers and be more favorable to the hybrid plan. It combines a lower defined
benefit with the employee's own 403(b) investment account (similar to a 401[k])
that is easily portable to another job.
So far, no city employees with a choice have picked the
hybrid over a traditional plan, in spite of the higher deductions from their
paychecks.
Although Nutter gave up his bid for furlough authority, the
administration said the union had agreed to changes in civil service
regulations that would facilitate temporary layoffs, essentially the same
thing, in the event of a serious budget deficit.
Another compromise dealt with overtime.
The city wanted to pay time and a half for overtime only
when employees actually worked more than 40 hours a week, not counting sick
days or holidays. The compromise: sick time would not count toward the 40 hours
needed to reach overtime; holidays would.
Sam Katz, until this month chairman of the Pennsylvania
Intergovernmental Cooperation Authority, the state's financial oversight board,
said Wednesday that with D.C. 47, Nutter's strategy of holding firm against a
speedier settlement appeared to have worked at a financial level.
"I've always worried there would be a catch-up
somewhere, some kind of disproportionate result," Katz said.
The proposed $2,000 bonus struck him as a moderate catch-up,
Katz said, along with raises over the next three years, but "in balance, I
still think that holding firm will have put the city in a better place."
But he raised another issue: "When people go without a
raise for a long time, there will always be a price to pay for morale. What
that price will be, I don't know."
Source: Philly.com
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