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For Immediate Release
April 16, 2001
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Contact: Joseph
Mancini
212-233-5531
cell: 917-273-7047
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PERB Victory
The New York City Patrolmen’s
Benevolent Association (PBA) won an historic victory today in its
battle to win a fair wage package for its 27,000 members when a
State Supreme Court Justice ruled that the so-called PERB bill is
constitutional.
The bill, long
sought by the police union and long opposed by the Giuliani administration,
provides for state arbitration of the PBA’s contract impasse with
the city under the auspices of the Public Employment Relations Board
(PERB).
“Everyone knows
that we cannot hire and retain police officers and there is a critical
shortage of applicants for the latest police exams,” said PBA President
Patrick J. Lynch. “Now we also know that the PERB law is constitutional
and that the process that should lead to our officers getting a
decent wage increase – which should solve those recruitment and
retention problems – will go forward.”
In today’s decision
in Albany, Supreme Court Justice Bernard J. Malone, Jr., granted
the PBA’s motion declaring the 1998 PERB law constitutional and
denied the city’s motion for an order declaring the 1998 PERB law
in violation of the Home Rule provision of the State Constitution.
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