WHEREAS:
The 14 Locals affiliated with Public Servants United of Puerto Rico (SPUPR)/AFSCME Council 95 present to the brothers and sisters of AFSCME this resolution of support approved during an Assembly May 23, 2010, in San Juan, Puerto Rico; and
WHEREAS:
On March 9, 2009, the legislative bodies of Puerto Rico  and Gov. Luis Fortuño-Burset (R), both from the New Progressive Party  (PNP) of Puerto Rico, passed Law 7, the Special Law Declaring a State of  Fiscal Emergency and Establishing a Comprehensive Plan to Stabilize the  Economy and Save Puerto Rico’s Credit, in force until January 1, 2012.  Gov. Fortuño claims that Puerto Rico has a structural deficit of over  $3.2 billion, and this law intends to save $2 billion in record time as a  compromise with bond holders; and
WHEREAS: 
Phase II of Special Law 7 included a plan to layoff  public employees of government agencies included in the Law of Fiscal  Emergency, excluding very few worker classifications; and
WHEREAS:
The plan to reduce the government payroll was implemented  by the Board of Fiscal Reconstruction and Stabilization, formed by  directors of agencies related to the government budget, coming from the  private sector without any experience in government or public  administration. This board decided to dismiss permanent public employees  with less than 13.5 years of public service unilaterally, without  explaining the reason for this time limit and without providing  employees with a forum to challenge such decision; and
WHEREAS:
This plan has dismissed more than 20,000 public  employees, of which 3,303 are affiliated with AFSCME locals in Puerto  Rico. This has affected the dues revenue of these locals and the number  of members in the District of Puerto Rico. These employees are fathers  and mothers, with these salaries as their only source of income, and  without the opportunity to receive help from social security in the  middle of a financial crisis in the United States. This has provoked a  critical economic and emotional situation in the homes of thousands of  our dismissed members, who now do not have enough money to cover basic  needs for their families; and
WHEREAS:
Law 7 suspended all economic benefits and salary  increases negotiated in the collective agreements, and froze the process  of collective bargaining until March 9, 2011, delaying negotiations for  an additional year and opening the door to requests for new union  elections for union representation in public agencies, thus challenging  the current exclusive representation of SPUPR/AFSCME Council 95; and
WHEREAS:
The administration of Gov. Luis Fortuño-Burset (R) takes  action against public employees of Puerto Rico without listening to the  claims and proposals of Puerto Rico’s unions and without considering the  social and emotional impact these dismissals have on workers and their  families. These dismissals have resulted in the loss of homes,  cancelations of bank accounts, bankruptcies, repossessions, the killing  of two guards from the Department of Natural Resources, members and  delegates of SPUPR/AFSCME Council 95, and even suicides; and
WHEREAS:
Gov. Luis Fortuño-Burset, the Senate and the House of  Puerto Rico, by restructuring state agencies, promote privatization  through public-private partnerships. This public policy of a Republican  government threatens the right to collective bargaining and the  cancellation of labor gains achieved over decades. Privatizing our  agencies aims at benefitting the wealthy, destroying public service, and  eliminating the right to collective bargaining; and
WHEREAS:
In the face of this difficult situation for the Puerto  Rican labor movement, unions that do not support the Public Employees  Unionization Law opt for raids. These unions visited worksites where  SPUPR/AFSCME Council 95 is the exclusive representative and collected  cards to petition for new elections with lies regarding the false  benefits of a new election after 10 years of exclusive representation,  within the 12 public agencies represented by SPUPR/AFSCME Council 95 and  petitioned for two of our three largest units; and
WHEREAS:
The government of Puerto Rico has an anti-worker agenda  that does not recognize exclusive representation, negotiated agreements,  nor labor rights or labor laws, with the government’s only goal of  eliminating unions in government agencies and returning to a  totalitarian control of public service.
THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED: 
Members and delegates of AFSCME accept this resolution presented by the brothers and sisters of Puerto Rico; and
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED:
That AFSCME notify Gov. Luis  Fortuño-Burset (R), the Puerto Rico Senate, and the Puerto Rico House of  Representatives that we are aware of the government actions with regard  to our brother and sister members; and
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED:
 That AFSCME condemn all actions aimed at  privatizing public agencies of the government of Puerto Rico and the  elimination of the right to collective bargaining within the  public-private partnerships; and
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED:
That AFSCME condemn mass layoffs in the  government of Puerto Rico. These layoffs need to be replaced with fiscal  savings measures, with public employees providing ideas and solutions  through their unions in order to reduce expenses and increase revenues;  and
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED:
AFSCME reinforce its support to Puerto  Rico locals and assist them during any union representation elections to  guarantee that SPUPR/AFSCME Council 95 prevails as the exclusive  representative for our members in Puerto Rico; and
BE IT FINALLY RESOLVED:
AFSCME reinforce its lobbying efforts in  Congress and the White House in support of Puerto Rican workers and  reinforce its support to SPUPR/AFSCME Council 95 efforts to have the  Puerto Rico legislature end Law 7 or amend it to allow contract  negotiations before its expiration in March, 2011.  
 
SUBMITTED BY: 
Braulio Torres, Delegate
AFSCME Council 95, Local 3647
Puerto Rico