|
Volume 34, No. 9, June 3, 2004 Senate
Panel Adopts Amendment In
an important victory for workers, consumers and small businesses, the
Senate Governmental Affairs Committee voted June 2 to amend a postal
reform bill so that it would limit excessive worksharing
discounts. Panel members voted 9-8 in favor of an amendment offered by
Sen. Joseph Lieberman (D-CT) before approving the bill unanimously.
The amendment included provisions sought by the APWU and consumer
organizations. Voting
in favor of the amendment were the Senate committee’s eight
Democrats, and Republican Arlen Specter (PA).
Voting with Lieberman were Tom Carper (DE), the bill’s chief
Democratic co-sponsor, Carl Levin (MI), Daniel Akaka (HI), Richard
Durbin (IL), Mark Dayton (MN), Frank Lautenberg (NJ), and Mark Pryor
(AR). Republicans voting
against Lieberman’s amendment were committee chair Susan Collins
(ME), Ted Stevens (AK), George Voinovich (OH), Norm Coleman (MN),
Robert Bennett (UT), Peter Fitzgerald (IL), John Sununu (NH) and
Richard Shelby (AL). The
Postal Enhancement and Accountability Act (S. 2468) can now go before
the full Senate. “If
postal reform legislation passes this year, it will have the strong
imprint of the American Postal Workers Union,” said President
William Burrus after the vote. “We
have worked long and hard to expose these unjustified giveaways to
corporate mailers. We are
pleased that a majority of senators on the committee stood up for the
best interests of postal workers, the Postal Service, and the American
people. “The
Coalition for a 21st Century Postal Service, composed of more than 150
business mailers and two postal unions, were formidable opponents on
the issue of corporate giveaways,” Burrus said.
“APWU’s position was the right
position for postal workers and the American public.
We are pleased it carried the day. “However,
the union remains concerned about provisions of the Senate bill that
would restrict the rights of injured postal workers. We object to any
legal disparity between postal employees and other federal workers,”
the union president said. “We
will urge lawmakers to adopt the House model on this issue. “The
fight is not over,” Burrus cautioned.
“The bill is subject to amendment when it is considered by
the full Senate, and we must ensure that our position on corporate
subsidies remains clear as the bills move through the legislative
process.” The House Government Reform Committee unanimously passed a similar bill (H.R. 4341) last month.
New Look for News Service The APWU News Service has undergone a
transformation, and we hope the new format increases readership. The
redesign is an effort to make the bulletins easier to copy, distribute,
and read. Thanks to all those union members who responded to our request
for ideas about how better to communicate with our members on the
important issues of the day. |