Pay & Benefits Watch
Seeing Red
- By David McGlinchey
- September 2, 2004
- Comments
Last year, lawmakers passed legislation that allowed the Pentagon to drop the General Schedule structure and implement a new personnel system for the department's almost 700,000 civilian employees. Friction over the plan ignited in February, however, when union officials objected to a plan that would replace the Merit Systems Protection Board's adjudicatory function. Union officials recently accused Pentagon negotiators of refusing to hold serious negotiations over the new personnel system.
In a further sign of deteriorating relations between the two sides, union officials held a press conference Wednesday and accused the Bush administration of using the personnel reform to outsource government jobs and enrich politically connected defense contractors.
Thomas Buffenbarger, president of the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers, called the new system "a great catastrophe." He said the National Security Personnel System was being developed with the philosophy, "what is it we can do to help the bottom line of private corporations."
The rewards of the overhaul will be seen by "the people who are spending millions and millions of dollars in New York City," said David Holway, president of the National Association of Government Employees, referring to the Republican National Convention now under way.
"This is one of the most devious acts I have ever seen in my entire life," Holway added.
Ben Toyama, the federal vice president of the International Federation of Professional and Technical Engineers, said the new system could "endanger the United States Navy's nuclear program."
The new proposals, Toyama said, "put safety and quality up against cost."
Defense officials did not respond to requests for comment, but last month the NSPS Program Executive Office Mary Lacey said the department had "meaningful dialogue" with the unions.
While some union representatives were leveling harsh allegations, American Federation of Government Employees President John Gage pointed out that progress could be made if Pentagon officials returned to the negotiating table.
"We can come up with a personnel system that is good for employees and good for the security of the country," Gage said.
He admitted, however, that it would take congressional intervention or a John Kerry victory in the November presidential election to compel the Defense Department to listen to union concerns.
"That's just the political reality of it," Gage said.
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