AFGE Ranks 1st As Fastest Growing Large Union in U.S.
April 15, 2024
The numbers are in. AFGE grew by 5.5% in 2023, making our union the fastest growing large union in the U.S.
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AFGE and the Department of Education have reached a settlement agreement over 14 unfair labor practice (ULP) charges the union filed against the agency after it unilaterally and illegally imposed a contract on employees in 2018 during the Trump administration.
In the settlement reached with AFGE, the agency agreed to:
“AFGE is always going to fight for the rights of the employees we represent and our rights as the union,” said AFGE Deputy General Counsel Cathie McQuiston. “And this fight took over 4 years, but we turned back all the illegal attempts by the Trump administration to bust the union at Department of Education. We had our rights restored and want this to be a lesson for any future administrations that try these kind of union-busting tactics that AFGE will never give up fighting for the employees we represent.”
Some background
Under the Trump administration, the Department of Education engaged in a three-year campaign to strip its employees of their fundamental rights and destroy their union.
AFGE, which is the exclusive representative for nearly 4,000 Department of Education employees nationwide, filed our first unfair labor practice charge against the department in March 2018 after management refused to bargain in good faith with the union over a new contract and instead imposed its own illegal management edict on the workforce.
Four months later, the FLRA announced that its investigator had found merit in the union’s ULP charge. Yet the agency refused to comply with the finding – and could not be compelled to do so due to the Trump administration’s failure to appoint a FLRA general counsel, who is the only person authorized to issue formal complaints.
In the months and years since, the department continued to violate labor law in a myriad of ways. It implemented changes to telework policies, imposed new employee performance standards, reorganized the chief information officer’s office, and relocated both the Chicago and Dallas regional offices all without negotiating with the union. It also denied union leaders the ability to provide fair representation to employees, refused to recognize union leaders in its regional offices, and refused to negotiate over labor-management changes ordered by President Trump.
AFGE filed 14 ULPs against the agency between March 2018 and August 2020.
The FLRA consolidated the 14 charges into one complaint and last year found the department guilty of 14 violations of labor law as charged by AFGE.
Our union has since worked hard to get the department to comply with the law, restore employees’ rights, and make sure they are made whole for losses resulting from the department’s illegal actions.
The numbers are in. AFGE grew by 5.5% in 2023, making our union the fastest growing large union in the U.S.
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AFGE and the Defense Health Agency (DHA) have reached an interim master labor agreement that will improve working conditions for 38,000 bargaining unit employees AFGE represents.
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Due to chronic staffing and attrition issues, the Social Security Administration (SSA) recently announced it will be closing a field office in Southeast Cleveland, Ohio, a community that is 94% Black.
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