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TOTAL
REPRESENTATION
What
a Fire Fighters' Union Must Provide Members in Today's World
The
facts are clear: today's world is characterized by
insecure employment. Fire Fighters need the highest possible
level of job protection. Their union must provide total
representation. It must be armed with complete service
capacity and a dedicated staff of highly qualified professionals
who deliver these services to the membership in a timely and
coordinated manner:
All
members must be assured:
Maximum appropriate pay for the work they perform.
The best possible employment benefits, including pension
and medical insurance.
Protection of all employees' rights, including the
highest standards for working
conditions, as established by law.
Top-quality labor legal expertise.
Direct availability of professional assistance in matters
of financial, insurance and
retirement planning.
Political clout: the strongest possible collective
voice in communicating needs,
opinions and positions to lawmakers.
A communications program which keeps everyone in the
organization fully informed,
which serves as an interconnection between the membership
and the organizational
leadership and which informs the public about the organization's
position on major
issues.
A leadership structure which represents the membership's
interest and goals in the
creation and implementation of the organization's
operating policies.
Total
representation means delivering full service:
The Michigan Association of Fire Fighters is, in every sense
of the term, a full
service public safety union.
THE
LABOR RELATIONS STAFF
Unequaled Experience, Expertise, Achievement
MAFF's
team of labor relations' professionals is acknowledged as
number one in experience and proven expertise in the State
of Michigan. It has earned this recognition by achieving an
unequaled record of success in all phases of union representation.
The
staff's wealth of experience in public safety labor relations
has been built through many years of performing highly specialized
work. Its expertise is a product of total familiarity with
every phase of a complex field of knowledge. The esteem in
which it is held by other processionals reflects unsurpassed
respect throughout Michigan's labor relations community.
Most
of all, the excellence of MAFF's labor relations staff has
been established by its unparalleled record of achievement.
This is what ultimately pays superior dividends to members.
MAFF
Director Michael O'Lear has an extraordinary background -
a family tradition that spans three generations in both public
safety service and union activism. The combination of the
legacy he shares and his own considerable experience is focused
on providing outstanding representation for MAFF members.
A Macomb Township fire fighter and EMT, he was a leader in
the movement that established the MAP-affiliated Michigan
Association of Fire Fighters (MAFF) as his local's union.
He negotiated two contracts for the Macomb Township Fire Fighters
Association/Michigan Association of Fire Fighters while serving
as chairman of the group. O'Lear, a retired maintenance employee
for the city of Centerline, was president of the local AFSCME
association for eight years and negotiated contracts and handled
arbitration's throughout that period. His father was president
of the Centerline fire fighters union, his mother was active
in union affairs for 25 years as an employee of the Centerline
School District, his wife was a union officer in another school
district, his brother was president of the Sterling Heights
fire fighters union, and his son also is a fire fighters'
union member.
Fred
Timpner, a former president of the Southfield Police Officers'
Association (SPOA) has more than two decades of experience
as a law enforcement labor leader. Within a year of joining
the department in 1971, he was chosen as a shift steward for
his local association. Soon afterward he was elected vice
president. A subsequent election made him president of the
100-member group.
Timpner's
obvious leadership qualities and rapidly demonstrated talents
in labor relations made him a high-profile candidate for a
new career as a law enforcement union professional. Fortunately
for the many hundreds of officers who since have benefited
form his negotiating and advocating skills and knowledge,
he decided to enter the field. Armed with his considerable
natural abilities, his valuable local association experience
and a full complement of college-level labor relations studies,
he became a full-time union service professional just a few
years into the modern era of the law enforcement labor movement.
From that
beginning, Timpner has earned an enviable reputation as an
expert in contract negotiations, grievances and grievance
arbitration's. His tremendously successful record has been
highlighted by negotiating two "breakthrough" contracts: the
agreement in Sterling Heights which for the first time brought
base wages of over $40,000 a year to officers in Michigan
and the pact which, years previous, smashed the $30,000 a
year barrier in the state. Just as important, Timpner is established
as one of an elite few professionals who are experienced in
presenting Act 312 arbitration cases.
His credentials
are such, in fact, that the former outstanding student of
the discipline has been called upon to teach college courses
in labor relations.
Ronald
Palmquist is a veteran of 21 years as a Southfield police
officer with an ideal background. He was a union steward in
the early 1970's, became his POA's secretary by 1980 and served
as its president during the '80's. After he was promoted to
sergeant in 1986, he was elected the Southfield COA's wage
negotiator, which meant he was the chief of the bargaining
team. After retiring in 1991 he came to work full-time for
the Union. Since then he has gained immeasurable experience
negotiating contracts and handling grievances through arbitration
for member units.
He has
good background experience in dealing with employers and has
a firsthand knowledge of what officers need and how to help
them get it. He possesses exclusive knowledge in health care
and pension plans.
"The proof is in the pudding" as the old adage says,
and if it is, one has only to look at some of the collective
bargaining contracts negotiated by Ron. They are some of the
best that are in the public sector.
Troy
Scott has worked for MAP for over six years. He has 10
years of previous experience as a police officer in Brownstown
Township and Oakland University. While at Brownstown Township
he served as secretary, vice president and president of the
local association. During his tenure at Oakland University,
he served as the vice president.
Troy has
had considerable experience in the investigation and handling
of grievances and contract negotiations and has served as
advocate with regard to numerous grievance arbitration cases.
Troy has
extensive experience in labor negotiations both in the private
and public sector. Troy has earned his reputation as a tough,
tenacious labor representative that fights for his members.
Troy is
currently working on his Master's in Labor Relations from
Wayne State University.
LEGAL
SERVICES
A Topflight Staff of Attorneys
Expert,
specialized legal representation is an essential service element
for any public safety professional union in the modern era.
A complex body of laws and regulations governs the relationship
between workers and their employees. Importantly, the protection
afforded by law and regulation is only as effective as a union's
legal talent makes it.
The
following firms perform MAFF's labor legal work:
Hoekenga
and Associates. Senior partner Dan Hoekenga,
who has represented law enforcement officers and fire fighters
in all types of labor matters for many years, handles much
of this vital work. All of Mr. Hoekenga's Associates provide
a formidable combination of highly-respected talent and years
of experience in successfully handling precisely the kinds
of matters that are most relevant to members.
Farrell
& Associates P.C. M. Catherine Farrell is the principal
in Farrell & Associates P.C., a law firm specializing
in Labor and Employment Law.
Ms.
Farrell was managing partner of Hoekenga & Farrell P.C.,
and was a senior partner and former managing partner of the
law firm of Levin, Levin, Garvett & Dill P.C. which specialized
in labor and employment law and transactional matters.
Ms.
Farrell is also an active arbitrator. She serves as a member
of both the commercial arbitration panel and employment law
arbitration panel for the American Arbitration Association
in the Detroit Region.
Ms.
Farrell holds a B.A. from American University, a M.S. from
the State University of New York at New Paltz and a J.D. from
St. Louis University.
The
unique relationship between the Michigan Association of Fire
Fighters and these highly skilled legal professionals is as
important to the union's members as the firm's talent base.
Over the years, the attorneys have teamed with MAFF's labor
relations' specialists in literally hundreds of cases of all
kinds providing representation that is unsurpassed by any
other union.
LEGISLATIVE
CONSULTANTS
Professional Lobbyists Provide Members With Clout
Public
safety officers have more of a stake in which laws are passed
- and which are not - than virtually any other class of professionals.
They are, for example, directly concerned with legislation
that:
Helps them do their jobs more effectively.
Protects such rights as Public Act 312 arbitration and non-residency.
Grants them workers' rights, both as individual employees
and as union members.
In order
to properly represent its members, a fire fighters union must
maintain close, effective working contacts with lawmakers,
MAFF members are represented in Lansing by a team of veteran,
highly-regarded legislative liaisons who keep the organization
fully updated regarding political developments that can affect
fire fighters. At the same time, they provide lawmakers with
detailed information about MAFF's positions and opinions on
all relevant legislation.
FINANCIAL
PLANNING SERVICES
Pre-Retirement Counseling, Insurance Information
Preparing
for the future is essential for today's fire fighters, particularly
in an era when they are able to retire younger than ever before.
That is why the Michigan Association of Fire Fighters offers
its members, without charge, pre-retirement counseling emphasizing
pension maximization.
Professional
financial planning is offered at no cost to all members via
a professional relationship with expert Keith P. Harrington,
account vice president of PaineWebber, Inc. He assists MAFF
members in such vital areas as pre-retirement planning.
Similarly,
MAFF members receive complete, cost-free insurance consultation
services from Jordan Raider and his associated professionals
at the Raider-Dennis Agency.
THE MAFF OFFICE CENTER
A Headquarters Building Designed for Efficiency
The location
and the resource structure of a union's central office combine
to have a significant impact upon the organization's ability
to serve its membership.
The headquarters
should be centrally situated in order for labor relations'
professionals to have rapid access to all members. It should
be in the closest possible proximity to the offices of the
union's other service providers, such as its legal specialists.
It should have the capacity to host large and small-group
meetings, to house the modern hardware that is essential to
a sophisticated business operation and to provide the kinds
of functional accessories that create a setting of which all
members can be proud.
MAFF's
central office is located at the heart of the network of expressways
interconnecting Michigan's cities. The labor relations' staff
thus is within swift driving range of points throughout the
state. The office is literally "down the hall" from
the organization's retained labor law firm. It boasts excellent
meeting and conference facilities and contains all of the
state-of-the-art machinery, including a complete computer
data system that is necessary to a modern union operation.
It has a comfortable, functionally attractive design of which
members are, indeed proud. And, just as important, it is kept
working at peak efficiency by a highly qualified support staff
that includes a research assistant.
Efficiency
is both the objective and the result of the headquarters office
design - the kind of efficiency that makes certain all members'
needs receive immediate and full attention.
MICHIGAN
ASSOCIATION OF FIRE FIGHTERS / MAFF
REGENCY OFFICE CENTRE
27704 FRANKLIN ROAD
SOUTHFIELD, MI 48034-8206
PHONE:
248-304-8806
FAX: 248-304-8810
WEB PAGE: http://www.maffonline.org
E-MAIL: MAFF911@ameritech.net
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