19th Annual Minnesota Law Enforcement Memorial Association Golf Tournament!
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19th Annual Minnesota Law Enforcement Memorial Association Golf Tournament!
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Law Enforcement Appreciation Night event on Feb. 23, 2016 with the Minnesota Wild. Top photo: Steven Warren, Corcoran Police Department; Jeff Beck, Rogers Police Department; Vance Rolfzen, Teamsters Local 320 Business Agent; Joann Springer, Ramsey County Sheriff’s Office and Josh Loahr from Dakota County Sheriff’s Office.
The second photo is of Jeff Beck’s two children, Gavin and Callen. Then children won a ride on the Zamboni between periods. Rolfzen says, “Their smiles tell you how much they appreciated the opportunity!” For Jeff’s daughter, Callen, this was her first Hockey game.
Podcasts from Labor Relations Information System
LRIS would also like to introduce our Q&A hotline where podcast listeners can submit questions directly to Will. To leave a voice mail, call 503-836-5255. In addition to your question, please let Will know the state where you’re employed and whether you work in a collective bargaining environment.
The Department of Labor’s new overtime rules.
The latest on Friedichs case and the future of “Fair Share”
The possible effects of PERF’s 30 Guiding Principles report
No ‘Special Rights’ To Light Duty For Pregnant Employees, McQuiston v. City of Clinton, No. 14-0413 (Iowa 2015)
Chicago Police Win The BlackBerry Battle, Lose The War, Allen v. City of Chicago, 2015 WL 8493996 (N.D. Ill. 2015)
Court Overturns Arbitrator’s Award Eliminating Pittsburgh Residency Requirement, City of Pittsburgh v. Fraternal Order of Police, 2016 WL 72742 (Penn. Cmwlth. 2016)
The post First Thursday, February 2016 appeared first on Labor Relations Information System.
Listen on LRIS.com
Local 320 remembers and celebrates Teamsters who passed away or fallen in 2015. We remember and support law enforcement, first reponders and the men and women who served and continue to serve in the U.S. Armed Forces.
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Teamsters Local 320 Winter Newsletter 2015
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Please help keep cop-killer behind bars!
We are asking for your assistance in keeping cop-killer, Audie Fox, behind bars. Audie Fox shot and killed Itasca County, Minnesota Deputy Sherriff Robert Lawson in the presence of his young son while Deputy Lawson was attempting to return the boy to the custody of his mother. The killer was trying to lure his ex-wife to the home, and when the deputy refused to cooperate, Fox executed him with a bullet to the head as the deputy lay on the floor. The killer was sentenced to life in prison, but under Minnesota law, a Life Sentence Review is being conducted and community input is needed, to determine how you feel about his possible release. Letters and e-mails will be accepted through December 28, 2015. Please take a moment to consider what impact Deputy Lawson's death had on you, your family, and/or your community. Your letter will have an impact on the outcome of the hearing. Please consider sending a letter to the below address and/or email. This is a particularly brutal murder. Deputy Lawson gave his life to protect the ex-wife from being murdered herself. Please let the Minnesota Department of Corrections know what you think about releasing this person. Thank you very much! All letters are confidential and will only be shared by the Commissioner and Advisory Board.
Please include in your letter: RE: Life Sentence Review Offender: Audie Fox OID #103592 MAIL: Brittany Anderson MN Department of Corrections Victims Assistance Program 1450 Energy Park Dr. Ste. 200 St. Paul, MN. 55108EMAIL: [email protected]
TOP COP Awards NOMINATION REQUEST!
Nomination form
Don’t let your TOP COPS® nomination get lost in the holiday shuffle! The January 12th deadline for nominations will be here before you know it.
We ask that you help get the TOP COPS® nomination form out to officers nationwide today. Please assist us in reaching our goal to see all 50 states represented with a nominee by
posting the nomination form on your website, in your office or department, or anywhere else you find it appropriate. As always, if you have any questions please do not hesitate to contact us at (800) 322-6276.
2016 will mark the twenty-second year NAPO has hosted the TOP COPS Awards®. With your help and partnership, TOP COPS® will be a tremendous success.
The TOP COPS Awards® Reception and Dinner will take place Saturday, May 14, 2016, at the JW Marriott Hotel, again coinciding with National Police Week.
Thank you in advance for your support.
National Association of Police Organizations (NAPO)
In the past, MNTLEL has had law enforcement members receive recognition and attend the awards banquet in Washington DC.
NAPO Supreme Court Victory
The U.S. Supreme Court issued today an order in a case where NAPO was an amicus curiae, or “friend of the court”. The case is titled Mullenix v. Luna, and arose from the use of deadly force by a Texas Department of Public Safety officer upon a fleeing suspect in a motor vehicle. The suspect was hit by rifle fire, killing him. The issue in front of the court was whether the officer could be sued in a civil rights case, or whether the officer enjoyed immunity from the prosecution of such a suit.
In a big victory for NAPO’s position, the Court ordered that the officer is in fact entitled to immunity from the civil suit. This case is important because the Supreme Court is emphasizing that trial courts should not be second guessing officers’ decisions made in the challenges of the moment, and that officers don’t have to be perfect, or be forced by judges to choose what judges years later feel they ought to have chosen.
This case is significant for NAPO for two reasons, one, the Supreme Court has sided strongly with the police in the current political climate of second-guessing police use of force, and, two, the Court’s order, attached above, cites NAPO’s amicus brief three times. (See page 9 of the order). In legal circles, it is rare to have an amicus brief referred to so many times in one short order. This is also a good example, I would say, of NAPO living up to its mission of representing the interests and viewpoints of rank and file officers at all levels of the federal government.
Please note that The Teamsters Union is both an institutional stakeholder and major supporter for the The National Association of Police Organizations (NAPO).
The Looming Crisis that Threatens Teamsters Local 320
From the last communication dated Oct. 29, 2015, Teamster members were informed and educated on the looming attack, Friedrichs v. California Teachers Association,and what it means for public sector unions nation-wide. Today’s communication is to update Teamsters on how the attack may affect public employees in Minnesota and to explore who is behind the attack. We will also identify the naysayers and briefly discuss Local 320’s strategic plan moving forward.
What Have Been the Consequences of “Right to Work” in Wisconsin?
In Wisconsin, where Governor Scott Walker decimated public sector unions, the cumulative effect has been devastating. Wisconsin trails Minnesota by every major economic indicator:
Employment growth in Wisconsin has been at less than two-thirds the rate of Minnesota over the past three years. Wisconsin ranks 13th in the country in its rate of employment growth.
According to the U.S. Bureau of the Census, American Community Survey, real median household income for Wisconsin’s workers shrank 1.39% under Governor Walker.
Governor Walker’s solution to fix Wisconsin’s budget shortfall was to slash $300 million out of higher education funding.
Minnesota enjoys budget surpluses, not shortfalls! Minnesota surpasses Wisconsin in job growth, economic development, income growth, education and health care spending. While Governor Walker decimated public sector unions in Wisconsin, along with workers’ ability to negotiate wages and benefits, Minnesota’s public sector unions continue to thrive. Minnesota isn’t perfect, but Local 320 members know that they are bargaining upward while Wisconsin workers are caught in a race to the bottom.
Who’s Behind the Attacks?
In a recent article for The American Prospect titled “Who’s Behind Friedrichs?” Adele M. Stan, says the “real force” pushing the case is the Center for Individual Rights (CIR), a group whose financial backers “reads like a who’s who of the organized opposition to labor unions. A number of those funders, unsurprisingly, enjoy the support of Charles and David Koch, the billionaire brothers who are principals in Koch Industries, the second-largest privately held corporation in the United States.”
Charles and David Koch have a long and sordid record of financing and supporting anti-union political groups, think-tanks and ballot initiatives. The Koch brothers have a direct connection to Governor Scott Walker and his anti-union policies.
Prepare for the Naysayers
There’s going to be a lot of commotion surrounding Friedrichs and many naysayers are going to come out of the woodwork. Employers are looking to Friedrichs with keen interest and some have already begun testing the waters with outrageous contract proposals and personnel schemes. Not every employer is anxious to see Teamsters lose, but there are always one or more supervisors, administrators, county board members or State Legislators who have anti-union positions. If right to work becomes a reality, then, these anti-union employers will become emboldened.
There will also be naysayers who are Local 320 members or fair share fee payers who want to use Friedrichs as an excuse to quit paying dues or to bash Local 320. They will also become emboldened if right to work becomes the law of the land. Every workplace has one or more of these naysayers and it will be incumbent on every Teamster to support the efforts of Local 320.
Meet Boss Tyrant and Joe Shirk (pdf)
Fighting Back Against the Attacks!
Just as employers and corporations combine and strategize, Minnesota’s public sector unions have combined to fight right to work! Teamsters Local 320 has been involved with other Minnesota unions in formulating strategies and tactics to protect public employees’ rights and labor contracts. Local 320 has also been in close contact with the International Brotherhood of Teamsters (IBT) Public Services Division to discuss plans moving forward. Officers and staff of Local 320 have been engaged in strategic planning initiatives to confront the looming crisis.
In the coming weeks and months, Local 320 officers and staff will be contacting every Teamster steward and every Teamster member encouraging a re-commitment to the union. We will ask every Local 320 member to re-sign a membership application in order to strengthen our resolve and send a message to employers that Teamsters are unified. Join us as we embark on a generational challenge to protect and preserve the benefits obtained for members of this union. Join us as we promote the rights of all Minnesota’s public employees through collective bargaining and organizing.
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Friedrichs: The Case That Could (But Won’t) Cripple Public Sector Unions
The Supreme Court will issue a decision next year that could severely impact the ability of public sector unions to represent their members. The case, Friedrichs v. California Teachers Association, will determine whether public sector unions may continue to collect fair share fees from employees who choose not to be members.
Two questions are presented in Friedrichs. The first is whether Abood v. Detroit Board of Education, 431 U.S. 209 (1977), should be overturned. Abood held that unionrepresented public sector workers may be required to pay for their share of union bargaining and contract enforcement, but may not be required to pay for other union activities. In other words, a public sector worker who chooses not to be a member of the union can be charged for his or her “fair share” of union dues—an amount sufficient to cover the union’s representation costs for that worker. (In Minnesota, state law mandates that the fair share fee may not be more than 85% of the regular membership dues rate. Minn. Stat. § 179A.06, subd. 3. This portion of the state law allowing the collection of fair share fees will be nullified if Abood is overturned.)
The second question presented in Friedrichs is whether public sector unions may require their members to affirmatively opt out of membership rather than affirmatively opt in. Put more simply, the Court will decide whether the union can ‘classify’ a worker as a member, and thus charge the regular membership dues rate, unless that worker specifically tells the union that he or she does not want to be a member. This second question will have little effect on the members of Local 320, because the Local already practices the affirmative opt in method (i.e., workers must sign a membership application before being considered members and being charged the full dues rate).
It is the first question, the potential overturning of Abood that may change the landscape of public sector unionism across the country. And that change is something that anti-union groups such as the National Right to Work Legal Defense Foundation and the Freedom Foundation have been working toward for years. Both of those groups, along with a number of others, have submitted briefs in support of the plaintiffs in Friedrichs. Why are they so involved in the case and its outcome? Because they want to destroy unions! Because they know that “right to work” means lower wages and benefits for working men and women, and more profits for big business. Because the public sector has the highest concentration of union membership in this country and destroying public sector unions gets them one step closer to destroying all unions.
If the Court overturns Abood, non-members will no longer be required to pay their fair share of the cost of the union representation they receive. If that happens, unions will be forced to represent their bargaining units with significantly less revenue. Less revenue will result in less effective representation and less power when dealing with employers.
Ask yourself this question: do you want your union’s power and effectiveness to be weakened because some workers will want a free ride?
Local 320 is making preparations to retain its power, regardless of how Friedrichs is decided. Nothing is more important to the leadership and staff of your union than retaining its ability to fight for its members in the strongest ways possible. In the coming weeks and months, the Local will be unveiling a multi-step strategic plan to maintain the union’s strength in the event that right to work becomes a nation-wide reality.
We - the leadership, staff, and the members of Local 320 - are going to teach the anti-union forces out there a hard lesson: they will not succeed in breaking us. Not now, and not ever!
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Law enforcement officials in 16 Minnesota cities are asking state officials to temporarily keep private most video footage captured by police body cameras.
“ Calls for restricting the release of footage is the newest tension as the tiny cameras become more prevalent around the state, creating new questions about storing the data and when the footage should be made public.”
Teamsters Local 320 Newsletter by Forward Gallop
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Teamster sisters and brothers-
Have a safe and outstanding Independence Day!
Thanks to all the men and women who served and continue to serve in the United States Armed Forces.
Thanks to all the working men and women who make our economy thrive.
Never forget that the labor movement is the backbone of this entire country and without the workers it falls apart!
In solidarity,
Brian Aldes
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2015 Minnesota State Legislative Recap
Despite a Special Session and battles with the GOP-controlled House, Local 320 Teamsters did quite well in 2015. Though we did not advance any major labor legislation this session, we were able to maintain what we already have and to repel the anti-union legislation proposed in the House. Overall, we made gains or maintained for all Teamsters Local 320 groups from the State of Minnesota to local government.
Higher Ed
Both the Minnesota State Colleges and Universities System (MnSCU) and the University of Minnesota received additional monies for operations; however, neither system reached “full funding.” Minnesota’s public universities and colleges were shortchanged by the State Legislature and will have to raise tuition in order to meet inflationary pressures. Please know that the State Legislature had the power and resources to fully fund Higher Ed but simply failed to do so.
Click here to view the text of the Omnibus Higher Education Finance bill.
Public Defense and State Courts
The Board of Public Defense and the State Courts nearly reached full funding and were able to secure a nine percent (9%) funding increase over the 2016-2017 biennium.
Click here to view the text of the Omnibus Public Safety and Judiciary Finance and Policy bill.
LGA/CPA
Because there was not a tax bill during the 2015 session there are no changes to Local Government Aid (LGA) to cities or County Program Aid (CPA) to counties. To view the certified LGA and CPA figures please visit http://www.revenue.state.mn.us/local_gov/prop_tax_admin/Pages/lga.aspx
Pensions
There were no significant changes to MSRS or PERA pension benefits. Click here to view the text of the Omnibus Retirement bill.
MNTLEL
Blue Alert: the State Legislature set up a statewide alert system aimed at catching suspected police killers. Like the Amber Alert to find children, the Blue Alert would be used to get the public’s help to track down a suspect when police officers are killed or wounded.
The State Legislature designated a segment of Trunk Highway 149 (Dodd Road) in Mendota Heights as “Officer Scott Patrick Memorial Highway.”
The State Legislature designated Trunk Highway 36 in Maplewood to be named “Sergeant Joseph Bergeron Memorial Highway.”
Schools
During the 2015 session education funding for public schools was undoubtedly the most contested and controversial item. The Special Session was able to push a deal between Governor Dayton and the GOP-controlled House. The final target is $525 million for funding increases: $63 million will go toward the general education funding formula, equaling a two percent (2%) increase for each year of the 2016-2017 biennium. The remainder of the funding increases will go toward early learning scholarships and “School Readiness” programs.
If you have any further questions or concerns about the Legislative Recap or have questions regarding items not mentioned on this outline please feel free to contact Gus Froemke, Local 320 Communications and Government Relations Director, at
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Teamsters Local 320 Law Enforcement Business Agents and Officers at The Law Enforcement Memorial Annual Golf Tournament.
Mike Kopp and Terry Neuberger, Teamsters Local 320 Business Agents. Justin Ballsrud, South Lake Minnetonka Police Dept and Steve Schoephoerster, Metro Transit Police Dept.
Have a Great Memorial Day Weekend!
Brothers and sisters,
This Memorial Day Weekend I want to send greetings and best wishes to all Local 320 families. If provided the opportunity, I encourage you to take some time to enjoy the holiday. Always remember that Memorial Day is not just about long weekends, picnics, or welcoming the summer months—it’s about honor and sacrifice.
Memorial Day is a day of remembering the men and women who died while serving in the United States Armed Forces—those who fought and died for our freedoms and our way of life. The men and women who served our Nation’s military and continue to serve warrant immense admiration from every single citizen of this great country.
Teamsters Local 320 will never forget the sacrifice of our brave men and women in uniform. We stand in solidarity with those who fight for our freedoms and we shall do so forever!
In solidarity,
Brian Aldes
Secretary-Treasurer
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Please congratulate all of the Teamsters Local 320 Scholarship winners!
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