Mission Statement

"Our mission is to organize federal employees to work together to ensure that every federal employee is treated with dignity and respect".

Friday, January 19, 2007

Battle of Red Hook Pivots On Cargo and Cruise Ships

Just a couple of years ago, the container port in Red Hook, Brooklyn, looked doomed.

It was doing less than 1 percent of the Port Authority’s business. Deputy Mayor Dan Doctoroff wanted to replace its orange cranes with cruise ships. And real-estate developers were gnawing at the edges, trying to convert onetime warehouses into market-rate condos with splendid views.

But fierce reactions from neighbors and politicians who want to hold tightly to the “working waterfront” of Red Hook’s storied past spurred the city’s Economic Development Corporation to temper this condos-and-cruise-ship formula.

Read the full NY Observer story here.

Port Authority: AirTrain Has Record Year

The Port Authority says four million people rode the AirTrain to the airport last year, an increase of 15 percent from 2005.

The AirTrain at Newark Liberty Airport also had the busiest year in its short history, taking on eight percent more passengers than in 2005

NTEU Closer to Representing Customs and Border Workers

One of the largest union elections ever conducted inside the government has moved a step closer to resolution.

The Washington regional director of the Federal Labor Relations Authority, in a decision issued late Wednesday, said the National Treasury Employees Union should be certified to represent about 30,000 workers in Customs and Border Protection, a major bureau in the Homeland Security Department.

NTEU defeated the American Federation of Government Employees last June -- 7,349 to 3,426 -- for the right to represent the employees. AFGE filed objections to the election, but a review conducted by Robert P. Hunter, the Washington FLRA regional director, found no merit to the claims.

Read the full story here.

Wednesday, January 10, 2007

H.R. 1 Passes House

Congressional approval last night of H.R. 1 putting Transportation Security Administration (TSA) employees on the same footing as other federal employees was welcomed by NTEU.

H.R. 1 is a broad package of legislation implementing many recommendations of the 9/11 Commission and includes language requiring that TSA employees have the same employment rights, including collective bargaining, as other federal employees. The legislation terminates the current personnel system and gives the DHS Secretary the option of moving TSA employees to one of the personnel management systems currently in place for other federal employees.

The bill contains a number of other provisions, including language requiring screening of all cargo coming into the United States. This provision could prove beneficial in securing additional personnel for Customs and Border Protection

CBP employees have full collective bargaining rights in the first place thanks to NTEU’s successful efforts in federal court in defeating regulations advanced by DHS and the Office of Personnel Management that would have severely restricted not only collective bargaining rights, but their due process and appeal rights as well.

Silverjet to Begin Daily Flights from EWR to Luton, UK

Silverjet will begin daily flights later this month from Newark Liberty International Airport to Luton Airport outside of London. Silverjet's fleet of Boeing 767s will be configured with 100 seats.

Read the full story here.

Wednesday, January 3, 2007

Bush Recess Appointment to Labor Board Draws Fire

President Bush's decision last month to grant a recess appointment to a Republican lawyer to sit on the governing body for federal labor-management disputes is drawing criticism.

Bush's decision leaves a Democratic slot on the panel unfilled.

But with Bush's Dec. 20 appointment of Wayne Beyer, a former administrative appeals judge at the Labor Department with a law degree from Georgetown University, FLRA is set to rule with two Republicans and no Democrats. Carol Pope, the only Democrat on FLRA, completed her five-year term at the end of the 109th congressional session.

Colleen Kelley, president of the National Treasury Employees Union, one of the largest federal unions in FLRA's jurisdiction, said she wanted the president to reappoint Pope.

"While NTEU is not advancing substantive objections to the Beyer nomination," Kelley said, "the union will oppose his confirmation to a full term as an FLRA member so long as the president continues to ignore his statutory responsibility to nominate a Democrat to this body."

Beyer joins Dale Cabaniss, former chief counsel for the Senate Governmental Affairs Subcommittee on the Civil Service under Sen. Ted Stevens, R-Alaska. Cabaniss was confirmed by the Senate in October 2003.

Beyer's recess appointment will last one year, at which point he will need Senate confirmation.