Federal staff union sues over Trump transfer to dam collective bargaining

A federal worker union has sued to dam a Trump administration order that might strip bargaining rights at 18 departments, arguing the president abused a restricted nationwide safety authority to assault unions.

President Trump final week signed an order that directed businesses to terminate already-signed collective bargaining agreements and to “cease participating in grievance procedures.” 

The Civil Service Reform Act that provides federal staff the suitable to unionize does have exceptions for nationwide safety, however in its swimsuit the Nationwide Treasury Staff Union (NTEU) argues Trump went past authority that enables its use if an company “primarily does intelligence, counterintelligence, investigative, or national security work.”

“The President’s sweeping Executive Order is inconsistent with this narrow authority. The Administration’s own issuances show that the President’s exclusions are not based on national security concerns, but instead a policy objective of making federal employees easier to fire and political animus against federal sector unions,” NTEU wrote in its swimsuit.

Whereas the order targets businesses it says have a nationwide safety mission, lots of the departments don’t have a strict nationwide safety connection.

Along with businesses with clear nationwide safety ties, the order additionally covers the Treasury Division, all businesses inside the Division of Well being and Human Providers, the Environmental Safety Company, the Nationwide Science Basis, the Basic Providers Administration and lots of extra.

NTEU stated that the statute might solely be used “in a manner consistent with national security requirements and considerations.” 

The swimsuit, filed in Washington, D.C., comes because the Trump administration took the bizarre transfer of submitting its personal authorized motion in Texas final week, making the primary transfer in litigation by asking a decide to declare as authorized its plans to terminate the contracts.

That swimsuit was filed in a single-judge district in Texas, presumably setting the stage for a square-off within the Supreme Court docket.

The NTEU swimsuit goes via every of the workplaces and businesses represented by the swimsuit, which ranges from the IRS to the Bureau of Land Administration, writing that they do “not primarily perform security, investigative, or intelligence work.”

The swimsuit argues that the order, a White Home truth sheet, and an accompanying memo from the Workplace of Personnel Administration all reference broader plans to fireplace federal staff.

“The OPM Guidance on the Executive Order shows that the President’s primary motivation for the mass exclusion of agencies from the Statute’s coverage is to make their employees easier to fire,” it states.

“The same White House Fact Sheet reveals the secondary motivation for the Executive Order: political retribution. In justifying the Executive Order, the Fact Sheet states that ‘[c]ertain Federal unions have declared war on President Trump’s agenda.’”

The actual fact sheet stated that present regulation “enables hostile Federal unions to obstruct agency management.”

NTEU wrote, “Neither facilitating worker firings nor political retribution is an applicable foundation for invoking Part 7103(b)(1)’s nationwide safety exemption.”

“These are nonetheless the President’s declared bases for excluding about two-thirds of the federal workforce from the Statute through this narrow exemption.”

Up to date: 2:34 p.m.

Leave a Comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *


Exit mobile version