TSA Employees at Charlotte Airport Join Together Under NTEU Banner

Press Release September 21, 2009

Charlotte, N.C.— Transportation Security Administration (TSA) employees at Charlotte Douglas International Airport have joined forces with the National Treasury Employees Union (NTEU)—the nation’s largest independent union of federal workers. The establishment of a NTEU chapter at North Carolina’s largest airport brings effective workplace representation to employees charged with securing the safety of our nation’s airports and traveling public.

Serving hundreds of frontline homeland security employees in the Charlotte region, Chapter 327 (TSA Charlotte) joins two other NTEU chapters for federal employees in North Carolina. NTEU Chapter 50 (IRS North Carolina) and Chapter 203 (CBP North Carolina) represent hundreds of Internal Revenue Service (IRS) and U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) employees throughout the state.

“NTEU has been responding to the concerns of TSA employees across the country who are dedicated to carrying out the security mission of their agency but who have no voice in their workplace,” said NTEU President Colleen M. Kelley. “Now, that will begin to change for TSA employees in Charlotte. NTEU already represents thousands of TSA employees at airports nationwide and is actively working to improve their workplaces.”

A leading factor in the low morale that has plagued TSA since its creation in 2001 is the lack of collective bargaining rights for its employees. “There is no reason that TSA employees should be denied the right to collectively bargain,” President Kelley said. “Through collective bargaining employees can have a say in their working conditions and help make TSA the most effective global airport security agency.”

NTEU has taken its concerns about the rights of the TSA workforce to Congress. Earlier this month, the union’s efforts were successful as the Transportation Security Workforce Enhancement Act was approved by the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee. This bill, H.R. 1881, would provide TSA employees with full collective bargaining rights and move them onto the pay system that covers the majority of federal employees. The bill now awaits a vote on the House floor.

The current TSA pay system is a second factor affecting the agency’s low morale. “Employees believe that the pay system is highly subjective and dependent on the whims of management,” said Kelley. “Meanwhile their federal employee colleagues are paid on a system that recognizes merit and that has clear and transparent policies.”

Not only is fair pay and civil service protections for TSA employees a priority issue for NTEU, it also is a key component of NTEU’s comprehensive five-point plan for the TSA workforce—a concrete set of goals that will address key concerns of employees nationwide. The plan not only calls for collective bargaining rights and an end to the current pay system, it also calls for full whistleblower protections by statute; a fair shift-scheduling system and adequate staffing; and revisions to the current TSA training and recertification system.

Chapter 327 joins a growing NTEU network of 19 TSA chapters at 21 airports stretching from Maine to California, including recent TSA chapters in Albany, N.Y. and Albuquerque, N.M.

All NTEU TSA chapters operate with local staff attorneys and labor relations experts to represent employees on critical workplace issues, such as promotions, disciplinary actions, shift bidding and scheduling, overtime, performance appraisals, leave issues and alternative work schedules.

President Kelley added that NTEU is uniquely qualified to represent TSA employees given its long history of representing other federal employees who work in our nation’s airports and protect our security. NTEU has represented U.S. Customs Service employees for more than 30 years and is the exclusive representative of the 24,000-employee unit of U.S. Customs and Border Protection.

The largest independent federal union, NTEU represents some 150,000 employees in 31 agencies and departments.

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