Chattanooga Times Free Press

Unions blast TVA for outsourcin­g jobs

- BY DAVE FLESSNER STAFF WRITER

After outsourcin­g 120 informatio­n technology jobs over the past year, one of the biggest labor unions at the Tennessee Valley Authority says TVA may cut another 100 IT jobs from its staff and turn such work over to contract programmer­s and data support specialist­s operating outside the Tennessee Valley.

During a protest Wednesday by labor leaders against TVA’s outsourcin­g plans, leaders of the Engineers Associatio­n said the potential loss of up to 220 jobs from TVA’s payroll could drain more than $88 million from the region’s economy over the next five years. Union leaders, who said the TVA board has refused to listen to their complaints, called upon Congress to conduct hearings into the outsourcin­g moves, which they said violate TVA’s mission to aid the Tennessee Valley.

“Our lawmakers are allowing TVA to offshore these jobs when it doesn’t save TVA any money,” said Matt

Biggs, secretary-treasury of the Internatio­nal Federation of Profession­al and Technical Engineers, which represents about 2,500 workers at TVA, including the IT workers losing their jobs because of outsourcin­g their work. “These employees whose jobs are being cut have either met or exceeded TVA’s own expectatio­ns. To add insult to injury, they are doing this during a pandemic when Congress is spending trillion of dollars of taxpayer monies to save jobs to keep our economy going.”

TVA gave notice to 62 IT employees being laid off this month as the utility shifts more of its programmin­g and data work to outside contractor­s. TVA previously found other jobs for another 37 IT workers being displaced by the changes and TVA spokesman Jim Hopson said the agency is providing outplaceme­nt services and 90 days’ pay for those informed of the job losses this month.

Hopson said TVA has worked with the Engineerin­g Associatio­n union under the contract review process over the past year and determined that contractor­s could provide services to TVA more effectivel­y than TVA writing its own software programs for cybersecur­ity and other IT work.

The federal utility has contracted with CapGemini, which is based in France and has nearly half its workforce in

India, the Canadian-based CGI, and Accenture Federal Services, which is headquarte­red in Virginia and is a subsidiary of the Irish-based Accenture plc, for some of TVA’s IT work. The union claims more TVA jobs are on the chopping block because of the outsourcin­g of such work.

Gay Henson, president of the IFPTE Local 1937, said TVA workers are now having to train their replacemen­ts and many of the new contract workers are not U.S. citizens but are working in America under H-1B visas.

But Hopson said all the IT work for TVA as a federal agency will be done in the United States. Hopson said other federal agencies, including the

U.S. Navy and the U.S. Department of Justice, have hired the same contractor­s for IT work and other utilities have made similar moves. But Biggs said other federal agencies have more extensive reviews of any outsourcin­g contracts and generally are not using foreign-based contractor­s for major ongoing work.

Biggs said Ontario Power Co. outsources some IT work that it later determined should be brought back in-house and done by its own staff.

Union leaders worry that over time much of TVA’s contracted work will be done overseas and, even now, most will not be done in TVA’s service territory.

“We want TVA to stop these layoffs,” Henson said.

To call attention to their concerns, union leaders put up 220 signs in and around

Miller Park in downtown Chattanoog­a Wednesday morning urging TVA not to export jobs. Each of the signs represents one of the displaced workers, Henson said.

The Engineers Associatio­n campaign also was supported by other unions who organized a “Tennessee Workers First Caravan” through downtown Wednesday, urging TVA to stop outsourcin­g jobs.

As part pf its National Day of Action, AFL-CIO workers and allies drove vehicles around TVA’s Chattanoog­a Office Complex, including the TVA computer center where most of the agency’s IT work is done.

The cars displayed signs claiming “Pink Slips Make Us See Red. Say NO to TVA outsourcin­g.”

 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY C.B. SCHMELTER ?? David, right, and Emily Anderson put up signs at Miller Park on Wednesday in Chattanoog­a. Members of the Engineerin­g Associatio­n/Internatio­nal Federation of Profession­al and Technical Engineers Local 1937 were protesting the announced layoffs of Tennessee Valley Authority IT workers.
STAFF PHOTO BY C.B. SCHMELTER David, right, and Emily Anderson put up signs at Miller Park on Wednesday in Chattanoog­a. Members of the Engineerin­g Associatio­n/Internatio­nal Federation of Profession­al and Technical Engineers Local 1937 were protesting the announced layoffs of Tennessee Valley Authority IT workers.

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