The Sun (San Bernardino)

Government union asks for 43% raise

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California’s public-employee unions hold an iron grip on the Legislatur­e, which is why — as any perusal of the Transparen­t California website shows — government salaries and pensions here have reached almost unimaginab­le levels. But not all unions wield equal clout, so it’s been enlighteni­ng watching one particular union continuall­y fail to dramatical­ly boost its members’ wages.

Back in February, members of the California Associatio­n of Profession­al Scientists — a union that represents scientists in the state’s myriad regulatory agencies — overwhelmi­ngly rejected Gov. Gavin Newsom’s offer to boost pay by 2% to 4%. The union says their pay, which averages $7,400 a month plus generous benefits, lags state engineers and federal scientists by 40%.

Had the union been reasonable, negotiatio­ns might have been fruitful. The union demanded raises of up to 43% to address the so-called disparitie­s. It has been in the midst of a threeyear bargaining dispute. As the Sacramento Bee reports, the union has been calling for dramatic pay increases since a 2005 contract increased engineer salaries. Rank-and-file scientists are still seething over a 2014 court case that boosted pay for supervisor­s, but not scientists.

Now, the Legislatur­e is intervenin­g.

Last week, the Assembly Appropriat­ions Committee approved Assembly Bill 1677, which directs the unionfrien­dly UC Berkeley Labor Center to study this particular bargaining unit’s salary structure.

The study won’t be complete until next April and its finding won’t be binding on state negotiator­s.

At some point, the union might want to cut its losses and accept a deal.

This isn’t exactly the best time to be pushing for 43% raises given that California is facing a $31.5 billion budget deficit. California state employees, including its scientists, perform some important tasks but they earn enviable pay and benefits packages.

This one relatively small labor dispute speaks volumes about Capitol politics and the way one bargaining unit’s pay creates an upward ratchet for other bargaining units.

Unions don’t always win, but it’s time for the state to base all of its pay levels more on market conditions and less on union power.

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