Actualización de la peticiónNYS Parole Officers Should Join NYSCOPBAParole Officers Are Not Civilians!
New York State Parole Officers
16 ene 2021

Greetings and Happy New Year! 

We wanted to start the new year by sharing with Parole Officers the specifics on how PEF sold us out.

In August 2004, the New York State Parole Officers' Benevolent Association (NYSPOBA) filed a petition with the Public Employment Relations Board (PERB) seeking to represent the bargaining unit of approximately 1,200 Parole Officers and other related titles.


NYSPOBA contended that the Parole Officer title is a law-enforcement position that doesn't belong in a union that primarily represents civilian positions.

The group also argued that PEF has inadequately represented the titles, and that the employees involved have a unique community of interest warranting their removal from the professional, scientific, and technical bargaining unit. NYSPOBA said that the Parole Officer title should be placed in the Administrative Law Enforcement Services Unit, which is currently represented by Council 82 of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees.

With the approval of all the parties, PERB Administrative Law Judge David P. Quinn bifurcated the hearing in order to decide the law-enforcement issue first. "Frankly, we believed that this was NYSPOBA's best argument, so it made sense to deal with it up front," a PEF letter to union officers stated. After five hearings were held in 2005 and 2006, ALJ Quinn ruled Feb.12 that Parole Officers are not primarily engaged in "the prevention and detection of crime and the enforcement of the general criminal laws of the state."

He noted that they are sometimes engaged in dangerous work. But he concluded that they are essentially responsible for promoting "public safety by preparing inmates for release and supervising parolees to the successful completion of their sentences."

We strongly disagree with PERB's decision and believe that the Parole Officer title should be placed in the Security Services Unit, which is currently represented by the New York State Correctional Officers & Police Benevolent Association (NYSCOPBA).

Click on the link below to read PERB's entire decision for (CASE NO. C-5441).

https://ecommons.cornell.edu/bitstream/handle/1813/89668/BD_Mtng_7_25_2007.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y 

In solidarity,

New York State Parole Officers

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