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Public
Employee Press Union
advances in economic talks
By GREGORY N. HEIRES
The city increased
its wage offer to the union at the latest bargaining session for a new economic
agreement covering about 100,000 members.
Negotiators made progress at
the Dec. 4 bargaining session, and union officials anticipate that the pace of
the talks will pick up as the expiration date of the current contract March
2 approaches.
We were happy to make some progress at the latest
meeting, DC 37 Executive Director Lillian Roberts said. At the same
time, we are not quite where we want to be. We have made it clear to the city
that we are prepared to roll up our sleeves and sit down and work hard to wrap
up the contract.
At the Dec. 4 meeting, city Labor Commissioner James
F. Hanley indicated that the Bloomberg administration shares the unions
commitment to work for a settlement as soon as possible.
We are still
interested in a quick settlement, Hanley said before increasing the citys
wage offer.
We are looking for fair and equitable raises and other
improvements, said Dennis Sullivan, DC 37s director of research and
negotiations. Besides wages, he said, the talks should start focusing on the unions
non-economic demands.
The DC 37 Negotiating Committee, which is made up
of the unions 56 local presidents, spent months last year drafting the demands
for the bargaining talks, which began Oct. 16. Local leaders proposed demands,
and the committee also considered outstanding proposals from past negotiations.
Besides
fair and equitable raises, the demands call for preserving the current level of
health benefits and increasing the citys welfare fund contribution rate
for employees and retirees.
Other demands include raising the 15-year longevity
increment and restoring benefit modifications made in the 2002-05 economic agreement.
The union also seeks a recurring annuity payment and an employer-provided transit
benefit.
The current economic agreement covers nearly 100,000 members at
mayoral agencies, cultural institutions, libraries, the Health and Hospitals Corp.,
the Housing Authority, the Metropolitan Transportation Authority and the Off-Track
Betting Corp. The pact runs from July 1, 2005, to March 2. | |