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For Immediate Release
January 3, 2000
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Contact: Joseph Mancini
212-233-5531
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PBA Halts
"Union-Busting" Promotions;
Action and Result Are Unprecedented
In response to an action brought
by the Patrolmen's Benevolent Association, a supreme court
justice today issued a temporary restraining order preventing
the New York City Police Department from implementing its
plan to begin promoting hundreds of police officers to the
rank of detective specialist this month.
The PBA took the unprecented
step of opposing the elevation of some of its members because
it maintains the promotions are an attempt by the department
to evade an order by the Office of Collective Bargaining last
Feb. 4 that stopped the commissioner from awarding "merit
bonuses" to selected officers without negotiating terms
of the awards with the union.
Today's order, by Supreme Court
Justice Stanley Parness, was the first time in recent memory
that the 27,000-member union was successful in a case of this
nature.
Justice Parness restrained
the department from designating officers detective specialists
without negotiating with the PBA concerning the criteria and
procedures for the designations.
"In trying to force through
these promotions, the department has been engaging in union-busting,
plain and simple," said PBA President Patrick J. Lynch.
"The NYPD's plan is a clear violation of the Office of
Collective Bargaining's order and decision last year. We won
that one, and we won this action today."
The department's plan would
have promoted a few hundred officers to detective specialist
this month and as many as 2,000 by the end of the year.
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