TSA Representation Election Petitions Dismissed—Add One For

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For Immediate Release
May 28, 2010
Contact: Dina Long
(202) 572-5500, ext. 7058
FLRA Regional Director Dismisses TSA
Representation Petitions; Appeal to FLRA Expected
Washington D.C.—As expected by the National Treasury Employees Union (NTEU), the
Chicago Regional Director of the Federal Labor Relations Authority (FLRA) today dismissed petitions
filed by NTEU and another union seeking a union representation election among employees of the
Transportation Security Administration (TSA).
“This was the expected decision,” said NTEU President Colleen M. Kelley, “and sets the stage
for an appeal to the three-member FLRA asking it to review its 2003 decision turning down a request
for a representation election in TSA because agency employees lack collective bargaining rights.”
President Kelley said NTEU will file such an application for review, raising the same
fundamental questions about what exclusive representation means without collective bargaining rights,
particularly questions about the nature of employee and union rights and TSA’s obligations to its
employees and their union under those circumstances. NTEU raised these questions in an earlier filing
with the Regional Director.
Meanwhile, NTEU continues to be engaged in an aggressive organizing campaign among TSA
employees and represents thousands of them at airports across the nation.
NTEU’s preferred resolution of the present situation is for the administration to issue a
directive granting TSA employees their long-denied rights to bargain collectively. “That would clear
the way for a representation election that would bring to the TSA workplace a mechanism for the
voices of frontline employees to be heard,” Kelley said. At the same time, she emphasized that NTEU
continues to seek legislation that would provide for such rights.
“NTEU will continue our aggressive pursuit of collective bargaining rights for TSA employees,
and regardless of the course taken, we will have a place on an eventual election ballot to ensure that
employees have a choice of an exclusive representative,” she added.
(MORE)
TSA Representation Election Petitions Dismissed—Add One
TSA has yet to reach the status sought for it by Congress of a world-class transportation
protection agency; it is troubled by high turnover, low morale, low pay and a variety of day-to-day
workplace issues that collective bargaining is best-equipped to address.
While the efforts to secure such rights continue, an appeal of the Regional Director’s decision
on the petitions to the full FLRA would give that agency the opportunity to revisit its 2003 decision
and, if it finds that an election may be held despite the lack of collective bargaining rights, to delineate
the rights TSA employees would have if they vote for exclusive union representation without
collective bargaining rights.
In its filing this spring, NTEU raised serious questions about which subsections of federal labor
laws would apply to TSA employees in the absence of collective bargaining rights, and particularly
representation rights and duties.
“It is clear to NTEU that, prior to balloting, TSA employees should have the answers to these
and other fundamental questions,” Kelley said. “This is critical information for them to use in making
an informed decision in their best interests.”
NTEU won the 2006 FLRA-run election covering the Customs and Border Protection (CBP)
bargaining unit—the largest representation election in federal sector history—by a margin of more
than two to one.
NTEU is the largest independent federal union, representing 150,000 employees in 31 agencies
and departments, including the entire 24,000-employee CBP workforce. Like CBP, TSA is a unit of
the Department of Homeland Security.
For more information, visit www.nteu.org
Additional contacts: Sheila McCormick, Mike Drapkin, (202) 572-5500
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