Why are government employees still getting paid on
official time to do union work? By Nathan
Mehrens
Will Rogers is reported to have once
said, “be thankful we’re not getting all the government we’re paying for.”
While there are certainly many areas where we’re not getting what we pay for,
one area where the problem is particularly acute is in an obscure federal
personnel practice known as “official time.” Official time is a practice where
a government employee is paid, not to do work for you as the taxpayer, but
rather to work for the union representing the employees at the agency which
employs this individual. The employee keeps their federal position, title, and
all the benefits that go with being a federal employee, but works for a union
instead of taxpayers. This is a direct subsidy to labor unions because they are
getting free labor that, but for the practice, would be an expense they would
have to handle out of their own treasury.
In years past the U.S. Office of
Personnel Management (OPM) was in the habit of publishing an annual report on
the practice, and the associated costs to taxpayers. In fiscal year 2012, the
last year for which OPM has bothered to release the figures, the reported cost
to taxpayers was over $157 million.
That money could have been saved. While the OPM reports give dollar figures and
account for the hours spent by agency officials on official time, they do not
disclose how many employees are working 100 percent of the time for unions
instead of taxpayers.
To give the public a better
understanding on this issue Americans for Limited Government Foundation has
filed a series of records requests using the federal Freedom of Information
Act. These requests asked for records from each agency on how many of their
employees are working 100 percent of the time for a union.
We have taken the information
disclosed to us per these requests and compiled
a report showing how many employees are working 100 percent of the time for
unions, along with information related to
their salary and the total salary cost to taxpayers.
Some of the information we received
is staggering. For example, the U.S. Department of Transportation has
twenty-six employees that work 100 percent of the time for a union. These
employees make as much as $183,300 per year, and their average salary is
$141,221. That’s certainly a nice salary, especially when you consider the
extensive, and expensive, benefits packages that are on top of this.
The U.S. Postal Service disclosed to
us that they have 274 employees who work 100 percent of the time for a union,
at a combined cost of over $16 million per year.
Like many areas of waste, fraud, and
abuse within the federal government, this one continues year after year.
Current law allows agency heads to negotiate with unions regarding how many
people you and I as taxpayers will be paying to work for the union, instead of
course, doing their actual job.
Next time you hear an agency
official complain that they don’t have enough money to handle the things they
are supposed to do, remember that they have plenty of areas where they can
easily make cuts, and cuts that will not have any effect on their program
activities. Spending money on official time is but one area of many where easy
cuts could be made.
Additionally, there is an inherent
problem with an agency forcing taxpayers to subsidize unions which are advocacy
organizations. Unions, of course, then turn around and lobby the government
seeking more money and benefits for their members. Just like we should not be
using taxpayer dollars to subsidize other advocacy organizations such as the
National Rifle Association or the Sierra Club, we should not be subsidizing
unions either. If the National Rifle Association or the Sierra Club want to
raise money to fund their operations that is their prerogative. It is not,
however, the proper place of the federal government to be funding them, or
unions, using your hard-earned tax dollars.
Nathan
Mehrens is President of Americans for Limited Government Foundation.
http://netrightdaily.com/2016/06/government-employees-still-getting-paid-official-time-union-work/
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