March 21, 2008
HOPE ratifies its contract with the city

The new contract that the city agreed on with HOPE has now been ratified by the union and will be taken up by the city next.


The Houston City Council plans to consider the measure during its meeting next week. If the contract is approved, Houston will become the state's first city to sign a union agreement with its civilian employees.

Members of the Houston Organization of Public Employees overwhelmingly voted for the contract agreement with 2,563 in favor and six in opposition. More than 50 percent of the union's membership of about 4,040 had to approve the contract for its passage.

"That's the magic number -- we made it," announced Felix Harvey, a union member and a city mechanic to a standing ovation from the dozens of other members awaiting the outcome.

The contract calls for an immediate across-the-board 3 percent pay increase for about 13,000 municipal employees, with similar increases in 2010 and 2011.

It also requires an immediate salary boost for the lowest-paid workers to $9.50 an hour. The federal minimum wage is $5.85 an hour. Officials estimate the package would cost $179 million during the three-year term.

Firefighters and police officers, who have their own contract, are excluded. Elected officials, such as City Council members, are also not included.

"The main thing is it has to do with respect," said Monica Cage, a Public Works employee who voted in favor of the contract.


Well done. A statement from HOPE is beneath the fold. I expect City Council will approve this, probably unanimously.

City employees voted overwhelmingly to ratify the contract between their union, the Houston Organization of Public Employees (HOPE), and the City of Houston. In balloting over the last two weeks, HOPE members voted 3,237 to 7 in favor of the three-year agreement. That result comes after a canvass that added 675 provisional ballots to the total.

The ballots were counted Thursday night at the Kelley Solid Waste facility and the tally was overseen by prominent community leaders, including Rev. James Nash of Sunnyside Presbyterian Church and Laura Boston of the Houston Interfaith Workers' Center.

The agreement now goes before the Houston City Council for final approval. If approved by the council, it will be the first-ever union contract between a Texas city and its civilian municipal workers.

"This agreement is great for Houston," said Patricia Mathis, a HOPE bargaining team member and management analyst with the Houston Police Department. "The contract will enhance quality public services for the city and ensure a living wage for every city worker."

The contract would establish a minimum wage of $10 an hour for city workers by September 2009 and immediately create a $9.50 an hour minimum -- a 45 percent raise for the lowest-paid city employees. Other highlights of the agreement include:


  • A community action leave pool in which city workers can donate vacation time to be used for volunteering on important community projects. Already, more than 1,200 city workers have donated vacation time into the pool.
  • Worker-management consultation committees that will promote idea-sharing and better communication on the job in order to strengthen city services.


The contract will also have a major impact on Houston's struggling neighborhoods, where many city workers live. HOPE estimates that the across-the-board raises in the contract will generate an additional $120 million in economic activity in neighborhoods like the Third Ward and East End over the next three years.

Posted by Charles Kuffner on March 21, 2008 to Local politics
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