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Vallejo deal calls for staffing and wage cuts, possible contract extension
Contra Costa Times ^ | 2/29/8 | Sarah Rohrs

Posted on 02/29/2008 8:36:41 PM PST by SmithL

VALLEJO -- A tentative labor agreement designed to keep Vallejo out of bankruptcy court calls for police and fire employees taking a 6.5 percent pay cut, the closure of two fire engine companies and fewer on-duty staff members.

The tentative agreement, reached Thursday and released Friday evening, is designed to close a $6 million general fund shortfall. It also provides for a one-year contract extension to 2011, but only if the two sides can work out a long-range fiscal plan by April 22.

"Execution of the agreement will allow the parties a short period of time to develop and begin implementing a plan that aligns revenue and expenditures in FY 2008-09 and beyond," City Manager Joe Tanner's report to the council says.

Under the tentative agreement, police and fire unions and the city would hire a mediator to assist with talks through April 22 on service reductions, revenues enhancements and labor agreement modifications.

The agreement goes before the City Council in a special meeting at 7 p.m. Monday.

If approved, the tentative agreement would then go to the fire and police unions' rank and file for ratification or rejection.

Fire union members are expected to vote on the agreement Wednesday and Thursday, said Kurt Henke, president of the International Association of Fire Fighters Local 1186.

Police union members will cast write-in ballots next weekend, said public safety attorney Alan Davis.

Besides the 6.5 percent salary rollback, police and fire would also forego a 1.5 percent increase due them through the remainder of this fiscal year.

The closure of the two fire engine companies would reduce fire staffing levels to 1985 levels.

"These are major concessions which are arguably going to have major impacts on public safety," Davis said.

The agreement also puts some restrictions on union business leave, and dismisses a variety of public safety grievances.

By reducing police minimum staffing levels, the agreement could halt the department arbitration proceedings over minimum staffing in their tracks. Arbitrator Tom Angelo has not yet rendered a decision.

Mayor Osby Davis told an overflow crowd at City Hall on Thursday that the tentative agreement calls for significant concessions from public safety employees, but is only a temporary fix to Vallejo's fiscal crisis.

The 11th hour deal reached Thursday afternoon postponed the council's evening decision on whether to file for bankruptcy.


TOPICS: Extended News; Government; US: California
KEYWORDS: bankruptcy; unions; vallejo; yourtaxdollarsatwork

1 posted on 02/29/2008 8:36:47 PM PST by SmithL
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For more history, click on keyword: Vallejo
2 posted on 02/29/2008 8:38:00 PM PST by SmithL (That's my story & I'm sticking to it!)
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To: SmithL

Coming soon to a town near you. Hopefully.


3 posted on 02/29/2008 8:43:24 PM PST by glorgau
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To: SmithL

The trail of debris left behind the cloud of California government liberals keeps growing....


4 posted on 02/29/2008 8:47:16 PM PST by EagleUSA
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To: SmithL
Wait a minute, I thought all liberals believe in fairness and letting all have a living wage? How can the people on layoff have a living wage if they are out of work?
5 posted on 02/29/2008 8:58:10 PM PST by nyconse
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To: SmithL

How come there aren’t any hard questions about “why” the shortfall? Hmmm? Can we say that illegal aliens—especially the chain migration of relatives and friends of other illegals here—are causing part of the shortfall?


6 posted on 02/29/2008 9:01:35 PM PST by levotb
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To: levotb
Can we say that illegal aliens are causing part of the shortfall?

Yes you can. At the state level. However, the two principal causes of municipal insolvencies are:

1) The extraordinary expense of public employee unions.
2) The diversion of local, property tax revenue by the Austrian.

7 posted on 03/01/2008 7:02:21 AM PST by Amerigomag
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