February 4, 2011
Unions Can Bargain on Behalf of Airport Security

By ERIC LIPTON

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/02/05/us/05unionize.html?_r=2&pagewanted=print

WASHINGTON — Seeking to end a debate that has brewed for nearly a decade, the 
director of the Transportation Security Administration announced on Friday that 
a union would be allowed to bargain over working conditions on behalf of the 
nation’s 45,000 airport security officers, although certain issues like pay 
will not be subject to negotiation.

The question of whether unions can negotiate on behalf of airport security 
workers has been a repeated topic of partisan debate on Capitol Hill, at times 
threatening to hold up major pieces of legislation or even the Senate 
confirmation of the agency’s director.       

John S. Pistole, the former deputy director of the Federal Bureau of 
Investigation who has served as head of the transportation agency since last 
June, announced Friday that he would used the power granted to him by Congress 
to authorize collective bargaining by airport security personnel on a limited 
set of topics, including rules governing who gets priorities for vacation time 
and shift assignments, how workplace transfers take place and how employees are 
recognized for commendable work. The negotiations will take place on a national 
level, not with state or local union affiliates.

The nation’s security officers are tentatively scheduled to vote in early March 
for one of two unions that have competed for the right to represent them, or 
not to have a union at all. But if they choose a union, they will not be able 
to turn to it to bargain on their behalf for such traditionally negotiated 
topics as pay, retirement benefits, job qualification rules, disciplinary 
standards or issues related to security procedures, like what security 
equipment they must use or when and where they are deployed.

This would allow the agency — a division of the Department of Homeland Security 
— to rapidly reassign security officers in response to a particular threat or 
to change security procedures or equipment without having to consult collective 
bargaining rules, an agency official said.

The security officers are also not allowed to strike or have any work-related 
slowdowns as a form of union demonstration. There will be set limits on how 
long negotiations on topics subject to union bargaining can drag on. And the 
officers will not be required to join a union or pay dues.

The security officers already have the right to join a union, and about 13,000 
are dues-paying members of the American Federation of Government Employees or 
the National Treasury Employees Union, the two unions competing for the 
exclusive right to represent them this spring. But these unions cannot now 
collectively bargain on behalf of the workers, representing them instead only 
as individuals, in certain situations, like if an employee is subject to a 
disciplinary action.

The question of whether a union should be allowed to bargain on the workers’ 
collective behalf continues to roil Congress, with Senator Roger Wicker, 
Republican of Mississippi, as recently as this week introducing legislation — 
as other Republicans have before — that would formally prohibit such a step.

Reaction from lawmakers came along predictable party lines, with Democrats, 
along with union leaders, praising Mr. Pistole’s decision, while Republican 
lawmakers condemned the move, suggesting that they will push ahead with efforts 
to legislatively terminate the collective bargaining rights.

“This will be President Obama’s biggest gift to organized labor,” 
Representative John L. Mica, Republican of Florida, the chairman of the House 
Transportation Committee said in a statement, adding that it was “all bad news 
for the traveler, the taxpayer and aviation security,” because it would limit 
the flexibility of the agency, despite assurances from Mr. Pistole that it 
would not.

The transportation agency has traditionally ranked low in surveys of federal 
workers that assess morale and job satisfaction, a ranking that Mr. Pistole 
hopes will improve if the workers are allowed to join a union that bargains on 
their behalf, even if the power of the union is strictly controlled.
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