The Herald, Sharon, Pa.

Local News

April 6, 2007

Firefighters contract arbitration costs Greenville $20,000

GREENVILLE — Greenville council has spent nearly $20,000 since January 2006 on legal costs to take the firefighter union’s contract to binding arbitration and then appealing a neutral arbiter’s ruling on that contract.

Council has been represented by attorney W. Timothy Barry, Canonsburg, Pa., since October 2005, when council and International Association of Fire Fighters Local 1976 agreed to take the unsettled contract to binding arbitration.

Borough Manager Ryan T. Eggleston said Thursday he did not have figures for 2005, but said council paid Barry $15,767 for his services from January 2006 through March 31 of this year.

In addition, council paid $4,107 to Michael Zobrak of Aliquippa, the neutral arbiter who issued a ruling Aug. 28 on a new contract.

Money was set aside in the budget under the professional services section for council’s legal costs during the arbitration and appeal, Eggleston said.

“That was a cost we wanted to plan for,” he said.

Council appealed Zobrak’s ruling in September, saying three items in the contract weren’t in sync with recommendations by the borough’s Act 47 recovery plan; Act 47 is the state’s program for financially distressed communities.

Mercer County Common Pleas Court Judge Thomas R. Dobson ruled March 27 in favor of one of the council’s issues, saying the borough can hire part-time firefighters to supplement the full-time force and reduce the need for overtime.

The contract previously said part-time firefighters could be used only to fill vacancies created by short-term absences of full-timers.

Dobson denied council’s appeal of the two other issues. He agreed that two firefighters should be on duty at all times and with a new longevity pay scale that gives firefighters with 24 years of service $800 and those with 30 years of service, $875. The previous contract capped longevity pay at 21 years of service. The lieutenant with the most seniority has 10 or 11 years of service, a department spokesman said Thursday.

Council met behind closed doors before Wednesday’s work session for a conference call with Barry to discuss Dobson’s ruling, Eggleston said.

Text Only
Local News
  • Labor Dept.: Franchise’s workers not paid properly

    The owners of the Brookfield Subway restaurant have been paying their employees less than minimum wage, shorting them on overtime pay and violating child labor laws for two years, a federal lawsuit alleges.

    February 7, 2012

  • Insecurity: Firm loses more local clients

    Reynolds Area School District is scrambling to find people to work security at upcoming games after finding out the Pittsburgh-area security firm they were using had some guards who were convicted felons or sex offenders.
    “That was a shock, believe me,” said school board President John Lowry.

    February 7, 2012

  • School budget predictions improve

    The upshot to planning for a worst-case scenario is it makes any change an improvement.
    Such is the case with Farrell Area School District’s finances, business manager William Dungee told school board members Monday.

    February 7, 2012

  • Chief gripe: Cramped quarters

    In Sharpsville, the long arm of the law needs room to stretch out.
    Police Chief Keith Falasco told council members Monday night that his department’s current space “is at the least inadequate,” and after off-and-on talks over the years to make improvements, he said the time has come.

    February 7, 2012

  • Pets perish in house fire

    A Sharon family’s home was heavily damaged in a Saturday night fire that killed their pets.

    February 6, 2012

  • Kelly rallies GOP faithful

    Mercer County Republicans agreed it was time for a change from the current administration at their annual Lincoln Day dinner Saturday night at Hempfield Station One Banquet Center, and Congressman Mike Kelly called not only for change but for more accountability.

    February 6, 2012

  • Mother leads charge for son’s autism therapy


    Gov. Tom Corbett’s budget cuts are preventing children with autism from getting the help they need.

    February 5, 2012

  • Victim describes armed robbery at her home

    Charges were held to court Friday against a Sharon teen charged as an adult in an October armed robbery.

    February 4, 2012

  • Overheated motor starts small fire at gas well

    Jamestown volunteer firefighters put out an accidental natural gas well equipment fire Friday morning in Greene Township that started when a pump motor overheated.

    February 4, 2012

  • Burglary was man’s solution to money woes

    The end of 2010 was “a crazy time in my life,” Grant T. Lockhart told a judge Thursday.

    February 4, 2012