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March 27, 2006
For Immediate Release |
Contact: Albert O'Leary
212-298-9190
or Joseph Mancini
212-298-9150
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Pat Lynch's Testimony Before the Civil Service and Labor
Committee of the City Council
Good Morning Mr. Chairman and distinguished members of the Committee.
It is with some irony that we address this Committee today, almost
40 years to the day that George W. Taylor and his committee submitted
their famous report to Governor Rockefeller, which formed the basis
for New York State’s Taylor Law. That report had its genesis
in Governor Rockefeller’s request “to make legislative
proposals for protecting the public against the disruption of vital
public services…while at the same time protecting the rights
of public employees.”
The Taylor Committee report recognized that the right to withhold
one’s labor, or the right to strike, is recognized as an "essential
democratic right of employees in the private sector.” For
a variety of reasons, the Taylor Law Committee found it inappropriate
to grant public sector employees the right to strike, but in exchange
the Committee envisioned “a system of effective Collective
Negotiation in the Public service.” We are here to tell you
that the system of collective negotiation in this City is not presently
effective and has not been effective for some time.
I am the President of a union, The New York City Patrolmen’s
Benevolent Association, with perhaps as much experience as any union
in the state with the Taylor Law’s Impasse Provisions. In
the last five rounds of bargaining, the PBA has invoked the impasse
procedures available to it under the Taylor Laws, four times. The
first two arbitrations were held under the rules of the City’s
office of Collective Bargaining, while our most recent two interest
arbitrations were held pursuant to the rules of the New York State's
Public Employment Relations Board. Yet, after almost two decades
of being compensated at levels far below our police counterparts
in other jurisdictions, we sit here in the year 2006 still between
20%-40% behind other police jurisdictions in pay benefits.
I would first like to address why it is we continue to invoke
the state’s impasse procedures.
Collective bargaining is non-existent in the City of New York.
The negotiation process in the City of New York has been reduced
to the following scenario in round after round of bargaining: The
City will pick the union that will settle for the lowest amount
and seek to apply that settlement with little or no deviation to
every other union in the City without regard to the other unions—competitive
standing in the area of compensation. I have never participated
in a single negotiation with the City Labor officials where our
compensation inadequacies are acknowledged by the City and a solution
was even considered. In other words, the City has never once in
the last 20 years, but certainly during my tenure of seven years,
negotiated in good faith with the union. Why? The answer is very
simple: it does not have to and, given the current state of the
Taylor Law, there is no risk to the City for not negotiating in
good faith.
Four arbitration panels that have considered the question have
done little to correct our compensation inequities. The first two
arbitrations under OCB were little more than show proceedings. The
OCB panels awarded the PBA exactly what the city offered every other
union, even if it was no raise at all, notwithstanding the wide
gap in salaries between the NYPD and virtually every other police
jurisdiction. The OCB system of resolving impasses between unions
and management must take the blame for creating an environment where
the City felt emboldened to offer City employees no raises at all
for 3/½ years in the 1990s. That is why OCB has been rightly
referred to as the “Lap Dog” of the City. Surely George
Taylor never contemplated an entity such as OCB administering impasse
procedures for public employees or the type of outcome we saw at
OCB.
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