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Democrat Barack Obama's victory in the presidential election on Tuesday has spurred federal labor unions to renew efforts to organize employees at the Transportation Security Administration.

Representatives of the American Federation of Government Employees and National Treasury Employees Union said that their top priority under the Obama administration will be to ensure collective bargaining rights for federal airport screeners. Both groups announced plans to immediately boost efforts to organize thousands of workers at the agency.

"We're going to step up real hard on TSA," said John Gage, president of AFGE, on Wednesday during a conference call with reporters. "Now with a real light at the end of the tunnel ... we're looking to step out and provide [collective bargaining] rights and deliver a true voice at work for [transportation security officers]."


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Gage said AFGE has hired about 35 business agents who will be responsible for setting up union locals at major airport hubs across the country. AFGE also has positioned its members in other federal agencies, including Customs and Border Protection and the Defense Department, to help "get behind the rights of [TSA] workers."

The union has worked closely with Rep. Nita Lowey, D-N.Y., to get co-sponsors for legislation that would repeal a footnote in the 2001 Aviation and Transportation Security Act -- the law that created TSA -- giving the agency's administrator free rein to "employ, appoint, discipline, terminate and fix the compensation, terms and conditions of employment" of workers.

In addition, AFGE and NTEU officials said they would push for legislation that would extend collective bargaining rights to the TSA workforce. "This is [an] ongoing [effort]," said NTEU President Colleen Kelley. "But now, with a new administration and a new Congress, I think the chances of it [succeeding] are much higher than they were yesterday."

In 2007, federal unions came close to securing collective bargaining rights for TSA workers in major homeland security legislation. But Senate Democrats stripped the language from the bill after President Bush threatened to veto it, citing the collective bargaining provision.

Until legislation allowing TSA employees to organize is passed, AFGE said it would urge the next TSA administrator to support bargaining authority, noting that such rights would help airport screeners to better serve the public because they would be compensated properly, well-trained and treated fairly.

In an Oct. 20 letter to Gage, Obama said he would work with federal unions to ensure TSA workers have such protections. He noted that because collective bargaining agreements provide a structure for addressing issues such as promotions, overtime, health and safety, and child care, such agreements could improve the performance and retention of transportation security officers.

"It is unacceptable for TSOs to work under unfair rules and without workplace protections -- this makes it more difficult for them to perform their jobs," Obama wrote.

Obama also pledged to re-examine TSA's pay for performance system -- the Performance Accountability and Standards System -- to determine whether it meets minimum requirements for fairness, transparency and accountability. "If it does not," he said, "we should replace it with the General Schedule wage system used by the rest of federal government, including other agencies in the Department of Homeland Security."

In addition, Obama noted plans to ensure that TSA is held to the same contracting rules as other federal agencies, pointing to a $1.2 billion human resources contract TSA awarded earlier this year to Lockheed Martin Corp. He argued that the contract was awarded "without regard to the rules that require them to allow current TSA employees to compete for that work."

COMMENTS

  • The big waist in government was establishing the Department of Homeland Security in the first place. We did NOT need another stinking federal agency to what could have been done by some basic reorgainizing of existing ones. And, Oh yeah, I feel a lot safer now that the airport screener draw a "federal" paycheck. When they were contract employees they had a union. Go figure. We are NOT safer now than pre-9/11. the reason is we do not profile passengers like we should.
  • I currently work for TSA and I believe that a union would be great. Well, maybe not great but better than what we have now. Most of the management for TSA have never been screeners before so they do not understand what it is like on the floor. Most passengers are rude and act like they forgot what happenbed on September 11th. One passenger told me that she would rather take her chances. That was stupid. Im sure other passengers would have told her to take her chances by herself. There is a threat out there. People act like we are safe. We are not. Most people act like Dan Ketter.... He might as well be a terrorist. He probably is. Anyone who wants less government (Especially Homeland Security) might as well be a terrorist. If TSA ever unwinds, as the terrorist Dan Ketter puts it, I am not flying anywhere ever again. You all can have that..... Thank you to all those who support your country and hate terrorist (Dan Ketter)or anyone who supports them (Steve C)
  • I am a former TSA employee and I am so glad I am no longer with that agency anymore! There was a serious need for some reform in their pay for performance system and their overall personnel practices. The whole agency runs on politics not on security of the commercial air travel system. Last I knew, the purpose of TSA was to make it safe to travel for all passengers. When I first started working for TSA I felt very happy and proud to be able to serve and perform a job that was very important. However, that feeling quickly faded and I found that I soon forgot along with all my coworkers what our real purpose and mission was. We were all so worried about passing tests that really didn't encompass how our real security processes work at the checkpoint that we were missing the big picture. The job satisfaction was so low, it is no wonder that we had such a high turnover rate. Union representation would help make better conditions and get TSA employees back to feeling what they should about their jobs - that it is a very important job!