Massachusetts City Takes Step Back From Residency Law
From The Enterprise, December 6
BROCKTON, MA – The
city's residency rule took a big hit Monday when the firefighters and police
patrolmen unions approved new contracts allowing them to move out of the city
after seven years.
The Brockton
Patrolmen's Association voted, 117-13, to approve the contract during voting on
Monday.
The firefighters
union approved their contract by a 97 percent margin, said union president Archibald
Gormley Jr., who did not have an exact tally.
"It has been
a long battle for everyone," Gormley said.
Mayor John T.
Yunits Jr., who leaves office on Jan. 2, said this morning the two unions would
be signing the contracts today.
Under the nearly
identical agreements, the two unions each approved two contracts:
A one-year pact
with no pay raise that would allow union members to move out of the city after
seven years. The residency change is handled in a memorandum of agreement in
the one-year pact, Gormley said.
The second
contract, a three-year deal with pay raises, that picks up after the one-year
deal.
The one-year
agreement will not require City Council approval because it does not involve
the appropriation of any money. Many councilors have been against approving a
contract easing the residency rule.
The portion of the
contract that includes pay hikes will go before the City Council, needing eight
votes to pass.
In 1991, voters in
a non-binding referendum voted for the residency requirement by a 3-1 margin.
The City Council
enacted it the next year.
The residency rule
has been controversial since the beginning, but this fall the debate became
heated as the firefighters union rallied publicly — and loudly, at some
demonstrations — against it.
The residency rule
was also a campaign issue in city elections, both two years ago and again in
November.
Under the rule,
every person first hired by the city on or after Jan. 1, 1992, has to establish
residency within one year. Teachers are exempt under state law.
The new contracts
weakening the residency requirement supercede the city ordinance.
There are 152
members of the Brockton Patrolmen's Association and 206 members of the Brockton
Fire Fighters Local 144.
Antonio Randolph,
president of the Brockton Patrolmen's Association, said this morning the
residency portion of the police contract would take effect on Jan. 1, 2006. It
would affect upwards of 100 of the 152 union members, he said.
The one-year
contract calls for a zero percent raise and allows officers to move out of the
city after seven years.
The second
contract calls for a total 8 percent raise over three years.
The three-year
contract includes a 2 percent raise in the first year, a half-percent in the
first six months of the second year followed by another half-percent.
The third year of
that contract calls for a 2 percent raise for the first six months, followed by
a 1 percent in the last six months of the pact.
In the police
contract, there are also increases in other areas of the three-year contract
that would bring the total pay hike over the course of the contract to 8
percent. Police union contracts provide incentives and payments for education,
uniform allowances, firearms work and other areas.
The firefighters'
contract mirrors that approved by the patrolmen's union, Gormley said today.
Gormley said the
firefighters union agreed to wage concessions because it understood "dire
straits" the city is facing financially in the future.
There are also
incentives in the firefighters' contract, he said.
It remained
unclear this morning how the residency clause would affect the only two police
supervisors on the department who were hired after the city insisted city
workers live in Brockton.
The police
supervisors union which represents sergeants, lieutenants and captains — has
yet to approve a contract.