NATCA's Forrey Says FAA's Statements "At Best Factually
Inaccurate"
The FAA calls it vindication... a sentiment not shared by
air traffic controllers. The FAA announced Monday the Federal Labor
Relations Authority (FLRA) has dismissed all of the National Air
Traffic Controllers Association's (NATCA) charges of unfair labor
practices related to the negotiation and implementation of the 2006
air traffic controller contract.

The FLRA determined that the Federal Aviation Administration
bargained in good faith and the agency’s implementation of
the contract was lawful, according to the FAA.
"This decision validates our new contract, which is saving
taxpayers $1.9 billion over five years and providing the resources
we need to invest in 21st-century air traffic systems," said FAA
Administrator Marion Blakey.
The FLRA dismissed NATCA’s charges -- filed with the
authority in April, July and September 2006 -- alleging the FAA
unlawfully submitted the contract bargaining impasse with NATCA to
Congress and engaged in a pattern and practice of bad faith
negotiations.
The FAA asserts the FLRA also found that there was no merit to
the union’s charge the FAA failed to bargain under the
auspices of the Federal Services Impasses Panel and implemented the
2006 contract prior to the completion of bargaining.
The FAA says FLRA's decision affirms the
agency followed the process enacted by Congress for resolving
bargaining impasses over changes to the agency’s personnel
system.
NATCA Responds
Not so quick, NATCA says. In a message to ANN, NATCA President
Patrick Forrey called the FAA's statement of apparent victory
premature, adding there's some question whether the FLRA is even
authorized to make such a ruling.

"The FAA's press release is at best factually inaccurate and
worst intentionally misleading," Forrey writes. "The dismissal was
issued by Regional Director of the Federal Labor Relations
Authority's (FLRA) San Francisco Regional Office despite his
repeated statements that there is no FLRA precedent over the
allegations. NATCA will be submitting an appeal to the General
Counsel of the FLRA. NATCA anticipates that the General Counsel
will follow her own past practice of issuing a complaint when as in
this case, there is no precedent and allow the case to eventually
be heard by the bipartisan three-member board of the FLRA, who has
had nothing to do with the case thus far. Moreover, nowhere in
labor law does unilateral implementation of terms and conditions of
employment form a contract, it only serves as economic warfare in
order to break impasse. Until NATCA's membership ratifies an
agreement between NATCA and the FAA no contract will exist."
Forrey goes on to say the FAA "is trying desperately to justify
its practices but the truth is that even a large majority of
Congress disagrees with the agency. Last year, a
Republican-majority-led House came within seven votes of a
two-thirds majority vote that would have sent the FAA back to the
contract negotiating table with NATCA. And just a few weeks ago,
the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee voted 53-16
to add language to the FAA Reauthorization bill that would send us
back to the contract table. That’s the strongest bipartisan
statement yet about how unfair the process was that ended up with
the FAA imposing work and pay rules on us last Labor Day
weekend.
"We are urging Congressional passage of an FAA Reauthorization
bill with this language included so that there will be some
incentive for veteran controllers to stay on the job long enough to
keep the system running and train their replacements," he
concludes. "Right now, the massive exodus of controllers is
eroding the safety foundation of the system and delaying flights.
It has resulted in 1,100 fewer certified controllers on the job
since 9/11, despite a huge increase in traffic that has overwhelmed
the system, according to the FAA and the airlines."