Contract Negotiations Begin

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(This article was first published in the September/October 2010 issue of The American Postal Worker magazine.)

Union Pledges ‘Best Effort’ to Achieve Agreement

Negotiations for a new national agreement between the American Postal Workers Union and the U.S. Postal Service began Sept. 1 in Washington, DC. The current contract expires Nov. 20, 2010.

“Every contract negotiation brings special challenges, and this will be no different,” APWU President William Burrus said at the opening session. “Mail volume is depressed and revenue is down, but we have faced similar challenges before.

“The history of the Postal Service is replete with forecasts of doom and gloom, but such dire predictions have not prevented us from exploring every opportunity to achieve agreement,” he said.

The union president said that warnings of the imminent demise of the Postal Service, and demands for “wholesale changes to the foundation we have built over our 40-year history” ignore the fact that each contractual provision has a history of give-and-take. That is the essence of contract negotiation, he said.

The Postal Service is experiencing difficult times,Burrus noted, but APWU members also face challenges. “Each time I have an exchange with a young mother who balances the competing obligations of her work at the Postal Service and home, I am reminded of the unique needs of postal employees, who are responsible for maintaining the best and cheapest postal system in the world,” Burrus said.

“The Postal Service and APWU are responsible, through their designated negotiators, for determining the conditions of employment,” he noted.

PMG John E. Potter (left) and APWU President William Burrus. “The road will be difficult and the outcome uncertain, but there are components of an agreement awaiting our discovery. I pledge the best efforts of the American Postal Workers Union to find a way,” he said.

Postmaster General John E. Potter said the parties have a joint interest in the viability of the Postal Service for the future, and promised to “work across the table to find an agreement that benefits both the USPS as an institution and postal employees.”

However, he cautioned that the Postal Service would put proposals on the table that would be “unpleasant.”

Despite management’s expressions of optimism in the opening session, in private briefings with the media, postal officials made it clear that they plan to make severe demands on postal workers, including concessions on wages, health benefits, and working conditions.

Postal officials told the media that with declining workloads, they can no longer guarantee eight-hour shifts for workers.

“We can’t count on things returning fromthe past,” the Postal Service’s chief human resources officer and labor negotiator told The Washington Post . The USPS hopes to win concessions from labor to replace many full-time jobs with part-time and seasonal work, he said.

However, Burrus was skeptical of the Postal Service’s plans to increase part time work.

“Where there is full-time work available, we expect it to be filled by full-time employees,” he told the newspaper. “We believe there is plenty of full-time work available.”

“We recognize the challenges facing the Postal Service,” the union president continued. “We do not view them, by themselves, as determining the future of the Postal Service.”

As we go to press, management has not yet submitted contract proposals to the union.

The next round of talks is set for Sept. 8, with additional bargaining sessions tentatively scheduled through the expiration of the current agreement.

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