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MAFF
Fights to Protect POC Jobs in Novi
MAFF members
very existence is being threatened by the Employer in Novi. The
Union believes that there is a concerted effort to force paid on
call officers out of the department and replace them only with full-time
fire fighters. Leading the attack on the local is the Chief who
ironically used to be a paid on-call fire fighter himself in another
community.
MAFF became
the exclusive bargaining agent of the Novi paid-on-call firefighters
association in July of 2004. The Michigan Employment Relations Commission
conducted the election. The fight was just beginning.
After many bargaining
sessions that failed to produce a collective bargaining agreement,
MAFF invoked Public Act 312 and took the impasse items before a
neutral arbitrator assigned by the state of Michigan. Had the Employer
prevailed, it would have made it very easy for the Employer to force
out the POC members by instituting an impossible attendance standard.
When members failed to meet this high standard, they would be dropped
from the Employment roles.
The Arbitrator
didn't buy any of it and awarded the Union's position.
Not to be swayed
in its ultimate goal of eliminating the POC members, the Employer
has found other ways to replace POC with the full-time fire fighters.
MAFF attorney
Catherine Farrell has filed an Unfair Labor Practice with the Michigan
Employment Relations Commission on behalf of the local.
The charge contains
the following allegations:
"The
hours of work of the POC fire fighters is and has been 6:00 p.m.
to 6:00 a.m. Monday through Friday and 24 by 7 Saturday and Sunday.
By contrast the full-time fire fighters employed by the Respondent
work Monday through Friday 6:00 a.m. through 6:00 p.m.
On May 14,
2008, the Respondent, through their Fire Chief, Frank Smith violated
PERA MCL 423.210 (1) (a), (c) and (e) by unilaterally removing bargaining
union work from the POC unit. More specifically on May 14, 2008
the Fire Chief, Frank Smith failed/refused to sound out (call in)
POC fire fighters for a "confined space" detail, which
occurred from 11:30 p.m. to 2:30 a.m. Instead of "sounding
out" the POC, the Fire Chief called the full-time fire fighters
back to work on overtime. That work was paid at time and one-half.
Charging party believes the reason for the refusal to call POC was
their decision to exercise their rights under PERA to organize.
Such action is a violation of their protected rights under 10 (1)
(c). Further the Respondent violated section 10 (1) (e) by refusing
to bargain over the subcontracting of POC fire fighters work."
Since MAFF has
filed this charge, the Chief has repeatedly on at least two more
occasions used full-time fire fighters on overtime to work similar
confined space details. MAFF members aren't the only ones suffering
from the actions of the Chief Smith. The use of full-time fire fighters
on overtime doing POC work costs the taxpayers of Novi a lot more
than if the POC fire fighters who are eminently qualified and trained
to handle confined space details.
"MAFF will
not stand by and let any Employer violate the law, the collective
bargaining agreement or the rights of its members," said Ed
Wertz, labor relations specialist for MAFF.
The case has
yet to be assigned to an Administrative Law Judge at the Michigan
Employment Relations Commission.
Flashpoint
Summer 2008
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