The Kenney administration granted 3.25 percent raises to
the 2,100 members of the Fire Department, effective July 1.
The raises were part of a reopening of the firefighters'
four-year contract, which expires next year. When the contract, which was
retroactive to 2013, was signed in January 2015, it awarded raises for the
first three years and left the fourth year open for negotiation.
The agreement called for annual raises of 3, 3, and 3.25
percent, with a reopener in 2016.
City spokeswoman Lauren Hitt said an arbiter decided on
the 3.25 percent wage increase for 2017.
The initial contract had a value of $70 million. The
reopener, which was settled June 23, added $6.9 million for fiscal year 2017.
In addition to the raises, the city also agreed to pay a
$2.65 million lump sum into the firefighters' health trust fund.
Andrew Thomas, president of the Philadelphia
firefighters' and paramedics' union, IAFF Local 22, did not return phone calls
seeking comment Tuesday.
The administration had set aside $10 million for new
labor obligations in fiscal year 2017 and incremental amounts through 2021
totaling $200 million as part of its five-year plan.
On Friday, it signed a $170 million, four-year deal with
the city's blue-collar union, AFSCME District Council 33. The city next year
must negotiate new contracts with its white-collar union, AFSCME District
Council 47, and the Fraternal Order of Police, as well as the firefighters.
Given the D.C. 33 deal and reopening of the firefighters
contracts, the city will have to resubmit its five-year plan to the
Pennsylvania Intergovernmental Cooperation Authority (PICA) for approval. Under
the 1991 state law that created PICA, state funding to the city is dependent on
PICA's approval of its plan.
Source: Philly.com
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