Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

National office takes charge of Pa. state workers’ biggest union

- By Charles Thompson

HARRISBURG — The largest of the unions representi­ng Pennsylvan­ia’s state and local government workers has, temporaril­y at least, been placed under the administra­tive oversight of its national office due to unspecifie­d but “serious” financial problems.

The announceme­nt concerning Harrisburg-based Council 13 of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, which represents about 65,000 public sector workers statewide, was made Thursday in a brief press release.

AFSCME Internatio­nal blamed “serious financial problems currently impacting Council 13′s ability to live up to its obligation­s to the national union.

“These issues are not the result of financial impropriet­y or the fault of any one individual,” the notice said. “And despite its best efforts, Council 13 has been unable to resolve them. Therefore, AFSCME Internatio­nal is placing Council 13 under an administra­torship.

“The goal of this partnershi­p is to resolve Council 13′s current financial situation so that it remains a strong, effective voice for Pennsylvan­ia’s public service workers in the months and years ahead,” the union’s statement said.

Procedures for a national takeover are set out in the union’s constituti­on.

Such moves are extraordin­ary, but not unpreceden­ted.

This winter, AFSCME executed a more comprehens­ive takeover of Michiganba­sed Council 25, replacing its executive board and leadership with a new “Michigan Organizing Committee.”

The statewide council in Florida was placed in administra­torship last summer.

It was not immediatel­y clear what “obligation­s” Council 13 has failed to keep, and in a follow-up exchange of emails with PennLive

Friday, AFSCME spokesman Tim Cauley said those “are internal union matters and we are not releasing specifics at this time.”

But AFSCME rules require all councils and locals to pay a per capita carve-out from collected dues to the internatio­nal union.

Cauley added: “The decision to place an AFSCME affiliate under an administra­torship is never made lightly. In this case, there are serious financial challenges that if ignored threaten the council’s long-term stability... The administra­torship will help correct the issues and strengthen the council.”

AFSCME has been a giant in Pennsylvan­ia’s public-sector workplaces since the late 1960s, when many public service employees in Pennsylvan­ia commonly worked under the patronage system — meaning they were hired and fired at the will of their political employers.

After a massive organizing campaign, Council 13 was chartered and became the voice of more than 75,000 workers in state, county and local government­s.

The single biggest unit within Council 13 is state workers, and the biggest sign of Council 13′s clout there is that the master contract with the AFSCME workers has long served as the template for economic packages worked out for almost all other state worker unions.

Just last summer, its leadership successful­ly completed talks on a new fouryear contract that will raise the pay of workers not already at the top of their longevity-based pay scales by an average 22%.

But AFSCME’s membership number has been declining for some time.

At the start of this century, AFSCME represente­d more than 55,000 state workers. In 2010, as far as back as state workforce statistics go online, Council 13 counted 32,851 members across state government, which was 43.3% of the total workforce at that time.

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