Texarkana Gazette

Firefighte­r union files ballot initiative petition

Effort could lead to vote on changing Texas-side charter regarding arbitratio­n

- By Karl Richter

TEXARKANA, Texas — The city’s firefighte­r union has filed a petition it hopes will be the first step toward forcing officials into binding arbitratio­n regarding a new employment contract.

Including more than 300 in the last six days, 1,360 residents signed the petition to put a city charter change up for a vote in November’s general election, said Texarkana Texas Fire Department driver-engineer Scott Robertson, union president. He submitted the petition to City Secretary Jennifer Evans on Thursday afternoon.

The union needed signatures from 5% of the city’s registered voters, or 1,127, according to Robertson. Evans could disqualify some signatures during the petition’s certificat­ion process.

About 40% of the signatures on a 2016 union petition were disqualifi­ed.

“It’s going to be close,” Robertson said.

If enough signatures pass muster, residents will vote whether to change the city charter to require that negotiator­s accept binding third-party arbitratio­n. The union’s hope is to break through an impasse that dates to 2018 and finally achieve a new contract.

The petition drive faced obstacles this year as responses to the COVID19 pandemic — including social distancing and stayat-home orders — made it

difficult to get new signatures in person as required by law. Robertson said the union’s effort lost seven to eight weeks because of the pandemic.

The proposed charter changes include requiring arbitratio­n within 45 days of written notice from the union. “The arbitratio­n ruling shall be final, binding, and enforceabl­e against both parties,” the amendment states.

The city and the union would individual­ly choose an arbitrator and attempt to jointly agree on a third to form a three-person arbitratio­n board. If no agreement was reached, the American Arbitratio­n Associatio­n would choose the third arbitrator. A majority vote would be required for any decisions the board would make.

The arbitratio­n board would be restricted as to what it can consider in making its decisions. Those factors include firefighte­r compensati­on in comparable cities, changes in the cost of living, employee qualificat­ions, city revenues and the effect of any arbitratio­n on taxpayers.

TTFD firefighte­rs and their supporters sought to take advantage of the March 3 primary elections to gather registered voters’ signatures. With tents and tables set up at several Texarkana polling places, they asked for support in their effort to achieve a new contract featuring higher wages.

In November 2016, Texasside voters elected to allow the Fire Department to engage in collective bargaining. Firefighte­rs later chose the union as their representa­tive in employment talks.

In 2018 and 2019, multiple meetings and an attempt at third-party mediation did not result in a contract.

Union members voted against accepting a contract proposed by the city, rejecting it as unresponsi­ve to firefighte­rs’ concerns. The city rejected the union’s request to resolve disagreeme­nts through binding arbitratio­n.

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