NFFE Joins Twenty-Five Federal Organizations in Letter Opposing Pay Freeze Extension, Staff Reductions
Thursday, December 8, 2011(National Federation of Federal Employees)
Yesterday, NFFE and 25 other members of
the Federal Postal Coalition came together to
send a letter to Capitol Hill urging elected
officials to take pay freeze extensions and
workforce reductions off the negotiating table.
The
letter – mailed to both party leaders in the
House of Representatives – comes at a critical
point in the legislative calendar, as Congress
is scheduled to leave for the holiday season in
just over a week. Among other essential
priorities, Congress must find a way to extend
the Social Security payroll tax cut and
appropriate funds for several federal agencies.
An earlier proposal by Senator Dean Heller
(R-NV) would have extended the federal pay
freeze through 2015 and slashed 200,000 federal
jobs over the next decade.
Though
that bill was soundly defeated by a 20-78 vote
last week, the prospect of similar proposals
appearing between now and the holiday recess is
very high. In anticipation of another attack,
federal worker organizations sprung into
action:
“On
behalf of the 4.6 million federal and postal
workers and annuitants represented by the
national member organizations of the
Federal-Postal Coalition, we urge you to reject
federal pay freezes and staffing reductions to
finance the extension of a reduction in the
Social Security payroll tax,” the letter
begins.
Continuing, “A key purpose of the payroll
tax holiday is to stimulate the economy and
encourage discretionary spending. Freezing
federal pay and cutting federal jobs to offset
a payroll tax reduction will only undermine
those aims and hinder our economic
recovery.”
The impact of an extend pay freeze or large-scale workforce reduction would be devastating for federal workers and the American people they serve. NFFE will continue to partner with other federal employee organizations – labor or management – to ensure that federal workers don’t pay an even higher price for a debt problem they didn’t create.
Click Here to Read the Federal Postal Coalition Letter

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