Contact:
Mike
Scott
(305) 642-6255 |
Workers File for Impasse with PERC
Following Six Months of Negotiations
May 6, 2008
(Miami, FL) –
Representatives of Teamsters Local 769 in Miami, Florida filed for impasse today
with the Florida Public Employee Relations Commission (PERC) on behalf of nearly
100 Monroe County corrections officers after six months of unsuccessful
negotiations.
The union and sheriff’s department began
negotiations in November 2007 after PERC certified Local 769 as the unit’s
bargaining representative in September of that year. The two sides have been
unable to reach an agreement because of unreasonable staffing changes and cuts
proposed by the sheriff’s appointed bargaining committee.
“These corrections officers work in an
environment that is inherently dangerous,” said Mike Scott, President of
Teamsters Local 769. “But instead of taking steps to improve safety in the
facility, the sheriff’s department is making ill-advised demands that could
compromise the precautions already in place.”
These demands include cutting staffing in
the most dangerous block of the Monroe County Jail called the ‘Alpha Unit’, an
area that houses violent offenders including murderers and rapists. The
sheriff’s committee has also demanded that a key position in the control center
of the jail be manned by cheaper, less experienced civilian personnel rather
than a certified corrections officer.
“We have made multiple proposals designed to
offset any costs associated with keeping these positions as they stand, but the
committee refuses to even consider them,” Scott said. “Ensuring the safety of
these workers is our primary concern. Frankly, it’s disconcerting that the
sheriff’s department doesn’t share our concern.”
Founded in 1903, the International
Brotherhood of Teamsters represents 1.4 million hardworking men and women in the
United States, Canada and Puerto Rico.