City, firefighters reach tentative agreement on contract

TEXARKANA, Texas - After three years of collective bargaining, City Council and union membership approval votes are the last remaining steps to adopting an employment contract for the city's firefighters.

Negotiators on Thursday reached tentative agreement on a contract featuring a pay raise plan that will move firefighters' salaries to a market average - based on comparable East Texas cities' fire departments - in three annual steps.

Firefighter union members will vote on ratifying the contract as soon as possible, and if as expected they approve it, the City Council will have its own approval vote during a future meeting.

Firefighters will get 40% of the pay increase the first year, 20% the second and 40% the third. The first step up will take effect Jan. 1, 2021, and the subsequent steps will take effect at the beginning of the fiscal year, Oct. 1.

An entry-level firefighter, the lowest-paid rank in the Department, now earns $38,643 a year. By Oct. 1, 2022, that position will pay $42,000. An assistant fire chief who has held that position for at least five years, the highest-ranking firefighter covered by the contract, will see their pay increase from $77,124 to $87,840 a year. All the various ranks and experience levels between will get raises, as well.

The contract includes a clause that allows the city to suspend the pay plan in the event of a major fiscal emergency.

The negotiators' ground rules prohibit them from communicating with the press except through a joint statement. No such statement had been issued as of Thursday afternoon.

The latest round of negotiations followed the success of a ballot initiative petition circulated by the union. In November's general election Texas-side voters will decide whether to amend the city charter to allow the union to force binding arbitration in any future collective bargaining.

In November 2016, Texas-side voters elected to allow the Fire Department to engage in collective bargaining. Firefighters later chose the union as their representative in employment talks.

In 2018 and 2019, multiple meetings and an attempt at third-party mediation did not result in a contract. Union members voted against accepting a contract proposed by the city, rejecting it as unresponsive to firefighters' concerns. The city rejected the union's request to resolve disagreements through binding arbitration.

This story has been corrected. A previous version misstated the salary of an entry-level firefighter as of Oct. 1, 2022.

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