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Times are
tough in New Jersey. There is no doubt that the fiscal crisis in our State
is having a significant impact in many, if not most, of our municipalities.
Threatened cuts to expected municipal aid has caused local governments to in
turn threaten City Employees with cutbacks, layoffs, reduction in work force
and hiring freezes just to name a few.
This is a scenario that has played
itself out many times in the past. State mismanages tax revenue, threatens
to cut aid to municipalities, municipalities threaten to cut staffing and on
and on and on. Unfortunately the government leaders know all too well that
the work force that will evoke the greatest public outcry are Police and
Firefighters. Therefore, we are traditionally the most often targeted labor
group.
In fact, our good relationship with the
public often is the very reason officials threaten to reduce our ranks to
exact public protest toward Trenton and pressure legislators to restore aid
to municipalities. While this tactic is unfair and disingenuous it is,
nonetheless, effective.
Many of our local union leaders have
reported serious threats to staffing, requests for givebacks, protracted
negotiation etc... Now is
not the time for panic. Now is not the time for capitulation. Now is not
the time for divisive pleas for immediate retirements. Now is the time for
resolve and adherence to collective bargaining agreements. Now is the time
for unity.
The obligation to safely staff municipal
fire departments rest squarely on local elected government officials. While
local fire unions are charged with continuing to pressure government for
manpower it is not our responsibility. It is our responsibility to demand
the highest standard of working conditions, maintain the collective
bargaining agreement, protect the rights of all members and negotiate the
best possible contract for our members.
To negotiate with the threat of layoffs
as a backdrop is not an enviable position to be in. We cannot, however,
allow management to undermine our position by pitting our members against
one another. We advocate for all members, the most senior and the most
junior. It is never in our best interest to sacrifice one for the other.
That would only accelerate a race to the bottom and the surrendering of hard
fought benefits only to be further eroded in subsequent negotiations.
The reduction of staffing and the
compromising of public safety as well as the safety of public employees are
irresponsible acts and those who choose to play with lives must be held
accountable. Scare tactics and blackmail have no place in negotiations and
must not be tolerated under any circumstance. To cave into such unjust
strategies would only lead to an undermined work force and create an
eventual collective bargaining agreement that wouldn’t be worth the paper it
is printed on.
Layoffs or the prevention of layoffs are
not, and should not,
be a function of collective bargaining. Safe staffing and an adequate
emergency response are the sole responsibility of local government
officials. Any dereliction of that duty falls at the feet of those
entrusted with the public’s interest.
As difficult as it may seem FMBA locals
must stand firm, negotiate without apology, provide for the greater good and
defend the entirety of our collective bargaining agreements until management
understands that we will not be bullied or compromise our right to negotiate
uncompromised.
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