Philadelphia : 13,000 Employees Receive 2.5 Percent Raise -cnbnews

PACKAGE LINKS RAISES AND BENEFIT REFORMS

Philadelphia, September 26, 2012 – Mayor Michael A. Nutter announced that the roughly 5,500 civil service non-represented and exempt employees and first-level supervisors in AFSCME District Council 47 Local 2186 will receive a new compensation/benefits reform package that includes a 2.5 percent pay raise and the reinstatement of step and longevity increases – effective Oct. 1 – as well as healthcare adjustments, proposed pension changes and work rule changes related to overtime and furloughs.

The employees who will receive the new compensation/benefits reform package are throughout the executive branch of city government, but also employees in independently elected offices, including City Council, the City Controller’s office, the District Attorney’s Office, the Sheriff’s Office, the Register of Wills and the First Judicial District.

The net cost to the City’s General Fund of the raises and related changes for the FY 2013-17 Five Year Plan is $17 million, a cost that does not assume the use of any furloughs. The city’s General Fund, which has a budget of $3.6 billion this year and a projected FY17 fund balance of about $60 million, will absorb the costs.

\”At the heart of this compensation package is a connection between employee pay raises and benefits reform that will move the City toward fiscal sustainability,\” said Mayor Nutter. \”As we struggle past the impact of the Great Recession, we must simultaneously act with fairness toward both hard-working public servants and taxpayers. Fair and fiscally responsible, this package is almost the same as proposals that union leaders representing the City’s non-uniformed employees have refused to consider.

\”In years past, non-represented employees and exempt employees were given the same compensation enhancements that had been negotiated with the two municipal unions. But the non-reps and exempts have not had a pay raise since 2007, did not receive a lump sum bonus in 2008 and some exempts have had furloughs and pay cuts,\” said Mayor Nutter. \”It is unfair to deny compensation improvements to one group simply because union leaders representing non-uniformed employees decline to act in the interests of current and future employees and taxpayers.\”

In 2008, the Nutter Administration came to a series of one-year agreements with all four municipal unions, agreements that included substantial savings in health costs. During that contract year, the Administration and union leaders also worked on longer term contracts that included proposals aimed at reforming the City’s ever rising pension and healthcare costs. But the parties were unable to reach agreement, and since July 1, 2009, the City has operated under the terms of the contract negotiated in 2008 with no subsequent raises, no increases in health care payments for the non-uniformed unions and the suspension of step and longevity increases. In addition, the non-represented and exempt employees in 2008 did not receive the $1,100 bonus payment that union members were provided. And many exempt employees took furlough days and pay cuts as part of the reductions to help balance the budget during the Great Recession.

The elements of the compensation/benefits reform package for supervisors in District Council 47’s Local 2186, often referred to as a \”meet and discuss\” unit where the City has the authority under the law to impose terms of employment, and for civil service non-represented and exempt employees include the following:

Wages: Effective Oct. 1, most employees in the above categories will receive a 2.5 percent pay increase.

Step and Longevity increments: Also effective Oct. 1, employees will have restored step and longevity increments. These increments were frozen on July 1, 2009. Employees will now be placed at the levels where they would have been had the increments not been frozen. For example, an employee at Step 1 in June 2009 will now be at Step 4. However, no back pay will be provided.

Pensions: Legislation will be transmitted to City Council for introduction to accomplish two goals regarding employee pensions – new employees will be placed in Plan 10, an existing hybrid plan that has a defined benefit provision and a 401-K style defined contribution component. In addition, employees who are not in Plan 10 will contribute more of their pay, about 1.5 percent more, for their pensions.

Furloughs: When the City’s fiscal condition warrants such action, City departments will be able to furlough non-represented employees. The Administration already has the authority to furlough exempt employees.

Overtime: The rules for overtime will change in two ways – double time will be eliminated and a new rule will be implemented that requires employees to work 40 hours in order to get overtime. The city will no longer count paid leave, except for vacation, in determining whether an employee is eligible for overtime.

Health Care: Employees who participate in the City Administered Plan’s HMO will see an increase in the employee contribution beginning in January 2013. The City will no longer offer a Point of Service plan. These changes aim to counter the impact of increased health care costs, holding unchanged the net costs to taxpayers. Depending on the plan, the City will continue to contribute between 89 percent and 92 percent of the total cost of employees’ health care.

The individual impact on employees of the compensation/benefits reform package outlined above will depend on a number of variables, including whether the employee is eligible for step and longevity increases, whether the employee has entered the DROP and no longer makes pension contributions, and in which health care plan the employee participates.

Employees in the PPO will not see any increase in their health care contributions, which currently cover 11 percent of plan cost. Employee HMO costs will rise from 2.5 percent of plan cost to 8 percent. By contrast, a 2012 survey of employer sponsored health benefits found that in the government sector employee contributions for an HMO for a single employee averaged 10 percent of plan cost and 13 percent of plan cost for a PPO for a single member.

For non-represented employees, the step and longevity increments that will be restored Oct. 1 will mean an average pay increase of $2,100. About 75 percent of non-represented employees will qualify for the increments.

In all, about 13,000 city employees including those announced today will have received pay raises by Oct. 1. This total includes those employees who received arbitration awards, namely police, corrections officers, deputy sheriffs and probation officers. Approximately 15,000 employees are also seeing changes to their pensions that will lower costs for taxpayers while preserving benefits for employees. Police, firefighters, deputy sheriffs, correctional officers, probation officers and employees in the Register of Wills office are in this category in addition to the employee categories announced today.

 

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HHS mandate allows minors free contraception, sterilization

 

By Kevin J. Jones

Washington D.C., Sep 25, 2012 / 04:06 am (CNA/EWTN News).- Minor children on their parents’ health care plans will have free coverage of sterilization and contraception, including abortion-causing drugs, under the controversial HHS mandate – and depending on the state, they can obtain access without parental consent.

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CCAGW Congressional Ratings Released

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SAINT JOSEPH\’S WOMEN\’S SOCCER OPENS ATLANTIC 10 PLAY WITH WIN AT TEMPLE, 1-0

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE – Sept. 29, 2012

AMBLER, Pa – Junior midfielder Mo Hawkins scored in the 54th minute and senior goalkeeper Christine Neal made five saves as the Saint Joseph\’s women\’s soccer team blanked Temple, 1-0, to open the Atlantic 10 portion of its schedule on Saturday afternoon.

After a scoreless first half, in which the Hawks out shot the Owls 15-6, Saint Joseph\’s would take the lead, 1-0, at 53:45 on Hawkins fifth goal of the season. With the ball in the Temple zone, junior Morgan Duffy chipped a pass into the middle of the box where Hawkins received and deposited a shot into the back of the net.

From there, Saint Joseph\’s (6-4-1, 1-0-0 A-10) would fight off a strong offense attack from Temple to earn the victory.

For the game, Saint Joseph\’s out shot Temple 22-20 with Neal making five saves to earn her sixth win of the year.

Saint Joseph\’s returns to action Friday at Duquesne.

– SJU –

 

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La Salle Falls 3-0 to Dayton -cnbnews

PHILADELPHIA – La Salle volleyball fought hard on Friday night, but fell 3-0 (25-16, 25-18, 25-13) to No. 20 Dayton at Tom Gola Arena.

The Flyers (11-4, 3-0 A-10) nixed the gritty Explorer effort by hitting .330 (45 kills-10 errors-106 attempts) as a team and accumulating 7.5 blocks on the night. In contrast, La Salle hit .132 (30 kills-16 errors-106 attempts) and posted no blocks.

Dayton cruised to a first set victory but La Salle countered with a strong start to the second. With the set locked up 7-7, the Flyers put their foot on the gas pedal, rattling off 18 of the next 29 points en route to the set victory. Dayton hit .455 as a team in the third period, extinguishing all Explorer comeback attempts.

Jennifer Whelan put together an impressive match, hitting .556 (6 kills-1error-9 attempts) while Kelly Scanlon was the lone Explorer with double-digit kills (13, .250). She added 8 digs and 2 services aces to her stat line as well.

Breanna Mazalewski compiled a match-high 19 digs while Samantha Tulskie tallied 12 of her own.

La Salle (3-15, 0-3 A-10) has a quick turnaround, as they host Xavier at 1PM Saturday afternoon. The Musketeers (9-8, 2-1 A-10) dropped a grueling match at Temple 3-2 on Friday evening.

 

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Summer Urban Youth Corps Program Works

 brings employment skills and training to local youth while enhancing urban gateways 

(Camden) – Continuing the Christie Administration’s commitment to provide young adults with work readiness and vocational skills, the New Jersey Department of Transportation announced that approximately 120 youth participated in the Summer Urban Youth Corps program at twelve locations throughout the Garden State.

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TCNJ 2 Ursinus 0, Lions Remain Undefeated

Ewing, NJ… The last time The College of New Jersey and Ursinus College met in field hockey was in the 2011 NCAA Division III semifinals with the Lions earning a 2-0 win en route to claiming the title. The teams met again on Thursday with TCNJ once again winning by that 2-0 score to remain undefeated on the season.

TCNJ is 7-0 and pushed its winning streak to 21 games, while the Bears dipped to 3-4.

The third-ranked Lions scored the only goal of the half as senior Jillian Nealon(Whitehouse Station, NJ/Hunterdon Central) was credited with her 12th of the season with 11:38 remaining before the half.

In the second half, TCNJ doubled its lead as sophomore Erin Healy (Spring Lake Heights, NJ/Manasquan) ran her goal-scoring streak to five straight swiping in a short feed from junior Sarah Cummings (Summit, NJ/Summit). The goal was Healy\’s sixth of the season and came 6:44 into the new half.

The Bears had a great chance to cut the deficit in half with just under eight minutes remaining, but were denied by TCNJ goalie Roisin Dougherty (Ocean City, NJ/Ocean City). The play started on the near end line with Ursinus forward Samantha Macchio (Redding, CT/Joel Barlow) carrying the ball along the line and sending a centering pass to an open Stephanie Cooper (Doylestown, PA/Central Bucks West). Cooper got off a quick one-timer, but Dougherty quickly got over to not only make the save, but thwarted Cooper\’s attempt at poking in the rebound.

Dougherty finished the game with three saves for her fourth shutout of the season.

Ursinus goalie Brittney Dolson (Gloucester City, NJ/Gloucester City)recorded 11 saves.

The Lions return to New Jersey Athletic Conference play on Saturday as they host William Paterson University at 1 p.m., while the Bears take on Centennial Conference opponent McDaniel College at home in a 1 p.m. start.

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Jerry Sampson , Gloucester Catholic Alumnus Class of \’48, Navy Veteran, KofC Member

SAMPSON

Riley \”Jerry\” 

 

On September 26, 2012. Age 82. Of Gloucester City. Loving husband of 59 years to Patricia Ann \"RileySampson\" Sampson (nee Nolan). Loving father of Maryann Deacon, Patricia Sampson (Gordon Smith), Teresa Andrews, Betsy Sherrer (Karl), Kathleen Murchake and Gerald Sampson (Rose). Cherished grandfather of Nicole, William, Christina, Melissa, Dillon, Alyson, Jamie, Tommy, Madison, Julia and Leah. 

Jerry (photo)graduated from Gloucester Catholic High School class of 1948 and later attended Temple University. He proudly served our country in the U.S. Navy. Jerry retired from RCA –GE Aerospace in Camden after 25 years. He was a lifelong parishioner of St. Mary’s R.C. Church, an honorary life member of Gloucester City Knights of Columbus Council 674 and volunteered for Msgr. Lucitt’s Needy Children’s Christmas Fund.

Relatives and friends are invited to attend his viewing on Monday morning from 8:30 to 10:30 AM at the McCANN-HEALEY FUNERAL HOME: 851 Monmouth St., Gloucester City. Mass of Christian Burial will be celebrated at 11 AM at St. Mary’s R.C. Church: 426 Monmouth St., Gloucester City. Interment with U.S Naval Honors will follow in New St. Mary’s Cemetery, Bellmawr.

In lieu of flowers, donations are requested to Gloucester Catholic High School Alumni Fund: 333 Ridgeway Street, Gloucester City, NJ 08030. Attn: Pat Murphy. In the memo please write: Riley Sampson

Condolences and Memories may be shared at www.mccannhealey.com under the obituary of Riley Sampson. Funeral Arrangements and Inquiries through: McCANN-HEALEY FUNERAL HOME: 851 Monmouth Street, Gloucester City. Ph: 856-456-1142

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147 STUDENT-ATHLETES NAMED SEMIFINALISTS FOR THE NATIONAL FOOTBALL FOUNDATION\’S WILLIAM V. CAMPBELL TROPHY

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Little League, SKLZ Team to Film Series of Instructional Videos

Little League International and SKLZ, the Preferred Training Partner of Little League Baseball and Softball, recently filmed several instructional video segments for the free online Coaches Resource Center.

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