The long-running labor dispute between the Delaware River
Port Authority and its police force may be coming to an end.
DRPA and the police union made final arguments to an
arbitrator this month, and the arbitrator has until Dec. 8 to issue a decision.
The 131 patrol officers, sergeants, and corporals, whose
last contract expired Dec. 31, 2009, seek a 3.75 percent pay raise for each
year from 2010 to 2017.
DRPA is offering a 1.9 percent pay increase for 2014,
2015, and 2016, with no raises for the other years.
The union blamed Gov. Christie, who can veto DRPA
contracts, for insisting on no raises.
The base pay of a rookie officer is currently $49,015 a
year, and officers with at least five years of experience are paid a base
salary of $64,417. A DRPA sergeant makes $80,181 a year.
The police force protects the DRPA's Ben Franklin, Walt
Whitman, Betsy Ross, and Commodore Barry Bridges and the PATCO commuter rail
line.
Fraternal Order of Police Lodge 30, which represents the
officers, said many local suburban police forces pay higher wages. DRPA noted
Philadelphia police are paid less than DRPA officers.
Also in dispute are DRPA proposals to increase the
officers' contributions for health insurance, eliminate the right to "sell
back" unused sick days, and eliminate 100 annual free bridge passes.
Source: Philly.com
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