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North Carolina congressman proposes bill to end federal pay for union business

North Carolina congressman proposes bill to end federal pay for union business
hazard-herald.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from hazard-herald.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

North Carolina congressman proposes bill to end federal pay for union business

North Carolina congressman proposes bill to end federal pay for union business
gjsentinel.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from gjsentinel.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Hiltzik: Trump s anti-union labor officials have been fired

Continuing his considerable effort to strip the government of all vestiges of Trumpism, President Biden on Tuesday swept a clutch of union-busting officials out of a little-known but all-important federal labor relations agency. The agency is the Federal Service Impasses Panel, which rules on disputes over government union contracts when an agency and its union can’t reach agreement. Trump stacked the 10-member panel with professional union-busters and anti-union ideologues, including corporate lawyers and officials from Koch network-funded right-wing organizations. The diversity of this panel ranges from people who publicly campaign against unions to people that actively litigate against unions.

New Bill Would Protect Early Retirement Benefits for Injured Federal First Responders

Government Executive Get the latest pay and benefits news delivered to your inbox. email New Bill Would Protect Early Retirement Benefits for Injured Federal First Responders Currently, federal first responders who transfer to another job at a federal agency due to an injury may no longer retire at 57, despite paying more into the retirement system. A bipartisan and bicameral group of lawmakers on Thursday introduced legislation they say will ensure that federal first responders do not lose full access to their retirement benefits if they are injured on the job. Currently, federal first responders contribute to their government retirement programs at an accelerated rate, due to their earlier mandatory retirement age of 57, and may receive their defined benefit annuity once they have served 20 years and reach age 50. But when a federal firefighter, Border Patrol officer, or other federal law enforcement official is injured while on duty and forced to transf

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