Top Stories
Help Put an End to the
DHS Regulations
The House
voted last week to put a final nail in the coffin of the
DHS personnel system--now it's the Senate's
turn.
As senators begin work on their version of
the fiscal 2008 Homeland Security authorization bill,
NTEU is urging them to support the
House-approved provisions repealing DHS's harmful
personnel management system and granting LEO status to
CBP Officers.
You can take
action to ensure your representatives understand the
importance of these provisions and endorse them. Your
efforts in generating support are vital, as the White
House has already threatened to veto the House measure
over the personnel rules provision.
Click
here or visit
<http:// capwiz.com/nteu/dbq/ officials/?lvl=C>.
| |
House Votes to Repeal DHS
Personnel System,
Grant LEO Status to CBP
Officers
The House on Wednesday passed legislation
containing provisions NTEU President Colleen M. Kelley called a
"major step forward both for DHS employees and the
nation."
Lawmakers approved language repealing
the DHS personnel regulations in the fiscal 2008 Homeland Security
authorization bill, despite a White House threat to veto the
legislation if the provision remains intact. The bill passed by a
veto-proof margin of 296 to 126.
"The repeal of the DHS regulations is
important to all federal employees," said Kelley. "If DHS retains
this authority to revoke decades of civil service rules, it is only
a matter of time before other agencies seek the same
authority."
The bill includes a second NTEU-sought provision
that would end the long-time inequity of Customs and Border
Protection (CBP) employees being denied law enforcement officer
(LEO) status. The administration also took issue with this
provision, arguing that CBP Officers do not meet the definition of
law enforcement officers. Kelley rejected that claim, reminding the
White House of recent shootings involving CBP Officers and a 2006
government report identifying more than 17,000 CBP employees who
perform law enforcement duties.
For the complete story, visit
www.cbpunion.org.
NTEU Backs
Anti-Discrimination Bill
NTEU voiced its strong support for legislation introduced
both in the House and Senate that would restore federal employee
protections against sexual orientation discrimination in the
workplace.
The bills, introduced by Sen. Daniel Akaka
(D-Hawaii) and Rep. Henry Waxman (D-Calif.), address an
interpretation of civil service statutes initiated in 2004 by Scott
Bloch, head of the Office of Special Counsel (OSC). Veering from
interpretations held for more than 25 years, Bloch said that the OSC
only has authority to protect workers from discrimination based on
specific sexual conduct and not orientation.
Bloch's narrow and impractical
interpretation would severely limit the discrimination cases OSC
would be required to accept and investigate. It is also inconsistent
with the views of the Office of Personnel Management and the Civil
Service Commission before it, as well as the previous Special
Counsel.
"There is no meaningful distinction between
discrimination based on an employee’s sexual orientation and
discrimination based on their sexual conduct," President Kelley
said. "I look forward to prompt congressional action on this vital
issue.”
For the complete story, click here
or visit
<www.nteu.org/PressKits/PressRelease/Press
Release.aspx?ID=1100>.
House Member Cites NTEU Concerns in Floor Speech
on FDA Lab Closures
A
California representative last week read a strongly-worded speech on the House floor voicing his "grave concern"
over the Food and Drug Administration's (FDA) proposal to close
seven labs. In his remarks, Rep. Tom Lantos (D-Calif.), whose
constituents include employees of the San Francisco District lab
slated for closure, underscored the importance of the labs to
California.
"Regional laboratories are even more
important today, when an E. coli outbreak in California needs
immediate attention and not days of delay because substances must be
shipped across the country to a lab in New York," he
said.
Lantos questioned whether alternatives
to the reorganization have been considered, citing strong opposition
to the plan from lawmakers and NTEU. "[President Kelley] has
expressed her concern that FDA employees are not being properly
considered in this radical transition plan to close labs this
spring," said Lantos.
For more about NTEU's efforts to stop
the FDA's reorganization plan, visit www.nteu.org/FDALabs.
NTEU Files Grievances Over Performance Awards at Three HHS
Divisions
First, the
Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) opposed an NTEU
request to expedite bargaining over a consolidated contract by
having a neutral third party help resolve outstanding issues.
Now,
HHS has denied employees their due performance awards, forcing NTEU
to file a grievance against three HHS operating divisions--the
Office of the Secretary/Administration on Aging (OS/AoA),
Administration for Children and Families (ACF) and the National
Center for Health Statistics (NCHS).
In each of the
grievances, NTEU alleges that the operating division not only
refused to pay appropriate performance awards, but falsely held the
union responsible for employees not receiving their payments. NTEU
has proposed that the parties work collaboratively on a procedure
valid only for this year to ensure that employees receive their
awards on time while negotiations continue over a national agreement
covering all HHS bargaining unit employees.
Look for
bargaining updates in future issues of the NTEU
e-Bulletin.
Senate Subcommittee to Examine 2008 SEC Funding
Proposal
Tomorrow
afternoon, the Financial Services and General Government
Subcommittee of the Senate Appropriations Committee will begin work
on fiscal 2008 funding for the Securities and Exchange Commission
(SEC). SEC Chairman Christopher Cox is scheduled to testify. In
March, he testified in support of the president's $905.3 million
budget request for SEC before the House Subcommittee on Financial
Services and General Government. To read Chairman Cox's House
testimony, visit www.sec.gov/news/testimony/2007/ts032707cc.htm.
Headlines
What's Good for the
Military...
Washington Post, May 2,
2007
The 2008 pay raise appears to be taking
shape.
The House Armed Services Committee
included a 3.5 percent raise for the military in the fiscal 2008
defense authorization bill, and Rep. Steny H. Hoyer (D-Md.), the
House majority leader, announced he will urge other House leaders to
provide an equal increase for civil service employees.
The
House approved the Homeland Security bill on a 296 to 126 vote
Wednesday. The bill includes a provision that would grant
law-enforcement status for purposes of determining retirement
benefits to certain Customs and Border Protection officers. The
administration has objected, citing the cost of providing more
attractive retirement benefits.
Colleen M. Kelley, president of the
National Treasury Employees Union, said the veto threat "shows that
this administration is willing to put its animosity toward fair
treatment for workers over the interest of national
security."
For the complete story, click here or visit
<www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/
article/2007/05/10/AR2007051002223.html>.
New on NTEU.org

Get Your Fill of NTEU
Headlines on 'NTEU in the News' Page
Has the
e-Bulletin left you wanting to read more media coverage of
NTEU's position and work on behalf of federal employees? Now you can
get a daily dose of NTEU headlines on the newest addition to NTEU's
web site, the NTEU in the
News page. From contracting out
to the 2008 federal pay raise, read what NTEU has to say on a range
of current hot topics in media outlets including the Washington
Post, USA Today, GovExec, Forbes and
others.
To see why NTEU is the leading voice for federal
employees, click
here or visit
<www.nteu.
org/PressKits/NTEUintheNews.aspx>.