Philadelphia's firefighters have been awarded a four-year
contract that increases salaries by 9.25 percent over the life of the
agreement.
The new contract with the Firefighters and Paramedics
Union Local 22 was reached through arbitration Friday morning, and will cost
the city about $70 million, Mayor Nutter said.
The contract also contains changes in how the union's
health-care costs are managed that should result in long-term savings for the
city, Nutter said.
The contract is retroactive to July 1, 2013, which is
when the union's last labor agreement expired. It will run until June 30, 2017.
The agreement is the last four contracts the
administration has reached with its major employee unions, which, besides Local
22, include District Council 33, District Council 47, and Lodge 5 of the
Fraternal Order of Police.
Nutter noted that only one of those contracts - District
Council 33 - will expire in 2016, meaning the city's next mayor will have the
luxury of not immediately facing labor negotiations with all four unions. When
Nutter took office in 2007, all four contracts expired within six months.
"This was an important issue for me, having gone
through this experience," he said. "Coming into office in January and
having four major contracts expire in six months does not necessarily put
either party in the best possible position."
The new contract permits union members with five or more
years of experience to live outside the city, a provision that was included in
the last contract with the city's police officers.
Nutter said "very, very, very few" of the
eligible police officers have chosen to move out of the city.
The contract also provides changes in how union members'
health care is funded.
Rather than providing the union a per capita contribution
toward health-care coverage, the city will directly take over the costs of
benefits. A similar agreement with the Fraternal Order of Police has resulted
in a $70 million savings by the city, Nutter said.
As part of the changes in health care, the union has
agreed to the establishment of a program that requires members to have biannual
medical exams. There are also monetary incentives for members to participate in
wellness and fitness programs.
Source: Philly.com
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