APWU, USPS Sign New Contract
APWU, USPS Sign New Contract
Monday, May 23, 2011
Sally Davidow
202-842-4250
sdavidow@apwu.org
APWU President Cliff Guffey and Postmaster General Patrick Donahoe have signed the 2010-2015 Collective Bargaining Agreement. Their signatures formalize the new contract, which was ratified by APWU members on May 11 by a vote of 69,451 to 22,351. The agreement will expire May 20, 2015.
“I am pleased that we were able to negotiate a contract that will strengthen the Postal Service for the future and protect the job security of union members,” said APWU President Cliff Guffey.
“The new contract is an important achievement for the postal workers and for the Postal Service,” Guffey continued. “Throughout the bargaining process, the union sought to negotiate a contract that would protect jobs and strengthen the USPS so that we can better serve the American people,” he said.
“The new contract accomplishes those goals,” he added, “and it shows that public-employee unions and their employers can make collective bargaining work — even when faced with a financial crisis.”
The four-and-a-half year agreement includes innovative approaches to safeguarding jobs; returns outsourced work to APWU members; protects career postal workers from layoffs, and limits long-distance reassignments, Guffey noted. It also increases workforce flexibility, and establishes a new pay scale for future employees. As a result of the new contract, the USPS will begin hiring for the first time in many years, the union president said.
The contract also provides for a 3.5 percent wage increase over the life of the agreement and retains cost-of-living allowances, with the first raise taking effect in November 2012.
APWU members will now make legislative activities a priority, the union president said. The union will support bills — such as H.R. 1351 — that will enable the Postal Service to remain viable in the future.
Bargaining between the APWU and the USPS began Sept. 1, 2010, approximately 90 days prior to the expiration of the old contract on Nov. 20. The parties agreed to several extensions while negotiations continued.
On March 14, the union and management announced a tentative agreement. The Rank and File Bargaining Advisory Committee voted unanimously to endorse the agreement, as did the union’s National Executive Board.