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Mayor Brandon Johnson got labor peace, little else from firefighters contract

Mayor Brandon Johnson achieved labor peace, but little else in a tentative agreement with the union representing Chicago’s 4,800 firefighters and paramedics so weighted in the union’s favor that it’s hard to imagine why it took more than four years to break the stalemate.

Former Mayors Lori Lightfoot and Rahm Emanuel talked about eliminating or softening the minimum staffing requirement and reconciling the number of firehouses with the fact that the Chicago Fire Department now spends two-thirds of its time responding to medical emergencies.

Neither one of them ultimately made those cuts. Johnson followed the same tough-talking script, only to retreat the same way.

Analysis bug

Analysis

The tentative, six-year contract hammered out under pressure from a mediator includes no major union concessions while matching pay raises — up to 20% depending on the rate of inflation — awarded to Chicago police officers in the contract that Johnson extended and sweetened.

It enhances benefits and working conditions for members of Chicago Fire Fighters Union Local 2. They include:

The mayor started out wanting to reshape the department by doubling — from 35 to 70 — the number of daily “variances” that allows the city to operate with four employees on engines and trucks.

What exactly did Johnson get out of the marathon labor stalemate at a time when he’s struggling to erase a $1.12 billion shortfall?

“He got labor peace in the fire department after four years of negotiations. We couldn’t get a contract. We have a contract. It’s a fair contract for the city,” senior mayoral adviser Jason Lee told the Chicago Sun-Times.

“That means that hardworking folks in the fire department have clarity on their wages [and] other dynamics. … That’s a good thing when your first responders are not worried about bargaining negotiations. They’re worried about doing exactly what they love to do every day, which is keeping the public safe. For us, that’s a win.”

Chicago Fire Fighters Union Local 2 President Pat Cleary, who briefed his union stewards Tuesday, said the stalemate dragged on for more than four years because the city “wanted to give us less than what the cops got” but he wouldn’t allow it.

“I got what I wanted and prevented what I didn’t want: the manning variances he wanted to double,” Cleary said. “That’s crazy. It’s too dangerous for our members. We’re not going to put them in that situation where you have less manpower on the scene so when something bad happens, I don’t have the help I need.”

The union’s members still need to ratify the agreement before a final vote by the City Council.

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