I received a note (not a flame, for which I thank the sender) asking me to address the specific points GIVDrvr brought up. Hopefully, this post will answer any questions. Quotes from GIVDrvr are shown in
bold.
The current contract contains an 'evergreen clause' that provides for the entire contract to continue in force until another Agreement in reached between the parties.
True-- and absolutely irrelevant to the discussion at hand, since the impasse resolution mechanism is not part of the contract, but is mandated as part of the empowering legislation that makes the contract possible. I have heard no reports that either party is not honoring the present contract.
The FAA is pursuing a policy that 224 Representatives and 37 Senators have already agreed is unfair.
The FAA is pursuing a policy that the majority of members of Congress saw fit to pass into law in '96. If the present Congress thinks that should be changed, they have the right and responsibility to change it.
I will advise AFSCME and their 1.4 million govt employee members that their negotiated rights no longer exist.
AFSCME does not, to my knowledge, represent federal workers, so my comments are not relevant to their negotiation options. My point, that the power to negotiate for wages and benefits is rarely granted to federal employee unions (and then only with very stringent conditions, such as the impasse resolution mechanism under discussion), stands.
Funny I can find nothing in the Congressional Record regarding NATCA being given any choices. Title 49 s. 40122 concerning FAA Reform is a public law passed by both Houses of Congress and signed by the President...levels of Govt well above even the most ambitious Union activist's reach.
Lobbying efforts which result in legislation are seldom noted in the Congressional Record. Title 49 s. 40122 was not a gift bestowed on a bunch of surprised controllers-- it was the result of an intense and successful lobbying effort. The choice NATCA made was to lobby aggressively for it's passage, despite presence of the offending impasse clause. There is little doubt that, had they not done so, there would have been no passage of Title 49 s.40122-- and NATCA would still be negotiating over superficial workplace issues (as most federal employee unions still do) instead of salaries.
Unlike private industry, major advances by federal government employee unions must be authorized, literally, by an Act of Congress. No other federal employee union has had near the success at getting those Acts passed than NATCA. The impasse resolution mechanism was part of the deal they made to get that specific piece of legislation passed-- the PR effort we are seeing now is simply their way of trying to amend it.
Each of those employee groups have negotiated their own unique set of work rules and have unique retirement plans as well.
Negotiated? No. They can only negotiate with their employing agencies, and their employing agencies don't have the power to grant benefits such as unique retirement plans. What they did do was lobby Congress to pass Acts which would achieve their goals, just as NATCA did. When such legislation is passed, the employee group is then bound by the restrictions found within the legislation, even when those restrictions seem inherently unfair. For instance, I had to work 25 years to qualify for controller retirement, while a colleague that came onboard five years later, but at a higher age, only had to work 20 years. The FAA has no power to change that, it's in the authorizing legislation. Likewise, in the event of an impasse, the FAA has no choice in how they will deal with the situation-- the empowering legislation requires them to submit it to Congress for action, and if none is taken, to impose their last, best, offer after 60 days. Is that a sweetheart deal for the FAA? Absolutely. But it's the price NATCA agreed to pay to get where they are today.
What we are seeing now is, pure and simple, a lobbying effort on the part of NATCA to change present law regarding resolution of impasse to make it more amenable to labor. Nothing wrong with that, just as there's nothing wrong with the FAA complying with present law unless/until the law is amended.