Posts Tagged Chicago firefighter contract

Chicago FF contract passes city council

Politics Early & Often has an article on the city’s approval of the new CFD contract:

Chicago will get a dramatic upgrade in ambulance care — and firefighters will get $32 million in back pay — under a five-year contract approved Wednesday that opens the door to even higher pay raises.

The agreement ratified by the City Council guarantees 4,645 firefighters, paramedics and emergency medical technicians an 11 percent pay raise over five years, but ends free health care for those who retire between the ages of 55 and 65. After Dec. 31, those retirees will be forced to contribute 2 percent of their annuities toward the cost of their health insurance until they’re eligible for Medicare.

The pre-Medicare fee for retiree health care was one of the only givebacks Mayor Rahm Emanuel was able to wring out of Local 2. The mayor came up empty on his laundry list that took aim at treasured union perks such as holiday and duty-availability pay; clothing allowance; pay grades; premium pay; non-duty lay-up coverage; the physical fitness incentive; and the 7-percent premium paid to cross-trained firefighter-paramedics. Nor did the union agree to Emanuel’s plan to have “double houses” — stations with both engines and trucks — to be staffed by nine firefighters instead of 10.

All 15 of Chicago’s basic-life-support ambulances will be converted to advanced-life-support, giving Chicago 75 ambulances capable of administering the most sophisticated level of care. The decision to end a two-tiered emergency medical system that paramedics have called a dismal failure follows investigations by Inspector General Joe Ferguson, WBBM-TV and the Better Government Association. All three concluded Chicago needs more advanced-life-support ambulances to consistently meet response-time standards.The 15 basic-life-support ambulances are expected to be converted to advanced in September.

The 11-percent pay raise is only a “floor.” If the Illinois General Assembly mandates a pension contribution higher than the current 9.12 percent, the Chicago Firefighters Union Local 2 can negotiate an even bigger pay raise.

Workforce Development Committee Chairman Pat O’Connor (40th) has acknowledged that the contract’s $80 million pricetag is almost certain to rise “if the state [pension] law changes—and we anticipate that it would.” But he rose on the City Council floor to praise Chicago Firefighters Union Local 2 for coming to the bargaining table in good faith and avoiding the financial wildcard of interest arbitration, where the cost to Chicago taxpayers could have been even higher. O’Connor noted that it’s the first time in recent history that firefighters have settled their contract before Chicago Police officers.

The $32 million in back pay is already tucked away in the mayor’s 2014 budget and will not require additional borrowing. It must be paid within 75 days of next week’s final City Council vote.

thanks Dan

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New contract for Chicago firefighters (more)

The Chicago Tribune has an article on the progress of the new contract for Chicago firefighters:

Chicago firefighters would get raises of 11 percent over five years under a proposed contract endorsed Tuesday by the City Council Workforce Development and Audit Committee.

The deal, already endorsed by the rank-and-file firefighters and emergency medical personnel who belong to Firefighters Union Local 2, is now slated for a full council vote next week.

“I couldn’t think of a person in America who wouldn’t enjoy that kind of wage increase,” said Ald. Michele Smith, 43rd. “This just to me has a large impact on our city’s financial status. And it’s better to have an agreement than have strikes and things like that, but this is a lot.”

Attorney Joseph Franczek, the city’s outside labor attorney, said firefighters could have received even bigger raises if that if the issue had gone to arbitration. As it is, they got the lowest set of firefighter wage increases since 1981. “I would submit to you that this is really a pretty reasonable agreement,” he said.

The additional cost to the city over the five years of the contract is $80 million, Franczek said. The contract covers 4,645 firefighters, emergency medical technicians and emergency medical personnel. The contract runs through June 2017 and is retroactive to June 30, 2012 — so the city is going to have to come up with $27.6 million in back pay this year. The city already had set those funds aside, city spokeswoman Kelley Quinn said.

In past years, the Chicago Fraternal Order of Police contract has been negotiated first, setting a model for firefighters union negotiations, but this time it’s reversed. Talks with the FOP are still underway and could be concluded in the fall, said Joseph Martinico, the city’s chief labor negotiator.

The firefighters agreement also calls for the city to convert 15 basic life support ambulances into more sophisticated advanced life support ambulances by the start of next year, bring[ing] the daily count of the better ambulances to 75, Martinico said.

And many firefighters also trained as emergency medical technicians would get slight increases in their higher “incentive” pay, although those hired after next Jan. 1 would have to be on the job longer to qualify for that.

Workers who retire after this year and are between the ages of 55 and 60 would have to contribute 2 percent of their monthly retirement checks to health insurance costs until they reach the age of Medicare eligibility. The city now picks up all of those costs.

There’s also a caveat to the pay increases — one that involves the fact that the city and state legislators have yet to come up with a plan to address the woefully underfunded status of the city’s police and firefighter pension systems. If any new pension changes are enacted by the state that increase firefighter pension contributions beyond the current 9.125 percent, the union has the right to reopen the contract to discuss wages.

thanks Dan

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A summary of information surrounding the new CFD contract

A blog post at Politics Early & Often part of the Suntimes.com, talks about Chicago not having to borrow to cover back pay for firefighters:

Chicago firefighters and paramedics will get more than $20 million in back pay without adding to the city’s mountain of debt, under a five-year contract that forfeits union givebacks for the possibility of pension reform.

Earlier this year, Mayor Rahm Emanuel persuaded the City Council to double — from $500 million to $1 billion — a so-called “commercial paper” program used to tide the city over between major bond issues. Chief Financial Officer Lois Scott said then that the short-term borrowing program would “ensure the city has liquidity for unseen needs such as retroactive salary payments and judgments.”

But City Hall insisted Thursday that the more than $20 million needed to cover the back pay was tucked away into all-purpose “finance general” accounts in the mayor’s 2014 budget and that the tab would not be covered by borrowed money.

The contract gives firefighters and paramedics an 11 percent pay raise over five years, maintains staffing levels and bolsters ambulance service by converting all 15 basic-life-support ambulances to advanced-life-support. The decision to end a two-tier system that paramedics have called a dismal failure would give Chicago 75 ambulances capable of providing the most sophisticated level of care.

It would also free up the equivalent of 30 firefighters, since each one of the city’s BLS ambulances are staffed by a pair of firefighter-EMT’s. The city has agreed to hire more paramedics — anywhere from 50 to 200, sources said.

“It’s sort of a back door way of getting variances” from the requirement that every piece of fire apparatus be staffed by at least five employees, said a source familiar with the agreement. “Manning factors go down. There are more people available in firehouses. It’s a win-win.”

In addition, the contract calls for a six-member committee — three mayoral appointees and three designated by Chicago Firefighters Union Local 2 — to study the need for additional ambulances. “The committee is to look at potentially putting five more ambulances into service by 2016,” said Ald. Nick Sposato (36th), a former Chicago firefighter.

“The BLS ambulance program did not work. Four thousand times last year, they sent a BLS ambulance and had to upgrade to ALS. To err on the side of sending ALS is fine. You certainly don’t want to send a BLS ambulance on an ALS run. Peoples’ lives could be in jeopardy.”

A top mayoral aide added, “Five more ambulances [for a total of 80] is certainly a goal the committee will be looking at. This is something the commissioner and the union feel strong about.”

The five-year agreement would require firefighters and paramedics who retire between the ages of 55 and 59 to contribute 2 percent toward retiree health care that’s now free. Police sergeants and lieutenants have already agreed to those terms. But that’s among the only givebacks Emanuel was able to wring out of Local 2.

The mayor came up empty on his laundry list taking aim at such treasured union perks as: holiday and duty availability pay, clothing allowance, pay grades, premium pay, non-duty lay-up coverage, the physical fitness incentive and the 7 percent premium paid to cross-trained firefighter paramedics. Nor did the union agree to Emanuel’s plan to have “double houses” that include both engines and trucks to be staffed by nine firefighters instead of 10.

Instead, the mayor settled for what sources called a “vanilla” agreement with a modest pay raise, in hopes of creating a “collaborative atmosphere” that will set the stage to solve the city’s pension crisis.

Next year, Chicago is required by state law to make a $600 million contribution to stabilize police and fire pension funds that have now have assets to cover just 30.5 percent and 25 percent of their respective liabilties.

Emanuel wants the General Assembly to put off the balloon payment until 2023 to lift the sword hanging over Chicago taxpayers and give him time to negotiate pension reforms with police and fire unions.

“If we had pushed on variances, manning or tried to go after junk pay and vacation pay, it would have ended up in interest arbitration, and the arbitrator would find an offset for it. We would have had to give up something else,” said a source familiar with the agreement.

thanks Dan

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