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S 2340 115th Congress Senate Government Operations and Politics Advisory bodies Executive agency funding and structure Government employee pay, benefits, personnel management Labor-management relations Office of Personnel Management (OPM)

Federal Labor-Management Partnership Act of 2018

Introduced: January 25, 2018 Introduced by: Schatz, Brian Democratic · Hawaii See on congress.gov
 Everywhere this bill has been 2 steps
Introduced
In committee
Reported out
Passed House
Passed Senate
To President
Became law
Jan 25, 2018
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs.
Jan 25, 2018
Introduced in Senate
 Plain-English summary Congressional Research Service

Federal Labor-Management Partnership Act of 2018

This bill establishes the Federal Labor-Management Partnership Council to: (1) advise the President on matters involving labor-management relations in the executive branch; (2) collect and disseminate information about and provide guidance on partnership efforts in the executive branch, including the results of those efforts; and (3) use the expertise of individuals, both inside and outside the federal government, to foster partnership arrangements in the executive branch.

The head of each agency that is subject to authority permitting employees of the agency to select an exclusive representative shall take the following actions: (1) create labor-management partnerships by forming labor-management committees or councils at appropriate levels, or adapting existing committees or councils if such groups exist; (2) involve employees and employee representatives as full partners with management representatives to improve the civil service to better serve the public and carry out the mission of the agency; (3) provide systemic training of appropriate agency employees (including line managers, first-line supervisors, and labor organization representatives) in consensual methods of dispute resolution; (4) allow employees and employee representatives to have pre-decisional involvement in all workplace matters to the fullest extent practicable, without regard to whether those matters are negotiable subjects of bargaining; and (5) evaluate progress and improvements in organizational performance resulting from labor-management partnerships.

What's happening now January 25, 2018

Read twice and referred to the Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs.

 Committees of jurisdiction 1