Bill Sponsors
Bennett, Noret, Read, Hull, Shanley, Corvese, Dawson, Potter, Voas, and McNamara
Committee
House Labor
Summary
Select
This legislation amends the state laws governing labor arbitration for firefighters. Specifically, it establishes an "evergreen" clause for collective bargaining agreements between firefighters and their municipal employers. Under this new rule, if an existing contract expires, all of its terms and provisions must remain legally active and binding until a new agreement is officially reached or an arbitration award is decided. This eliminates the need for parties to sign a separate written agreement to extend the contract and removes previous deadlines for proposing changes to keep the contract terms in force.
Analysis
Pros for Progressives
- Strengthens the bargaining power of organized labor by ensuring that firefighters do not lose hard-won benefits or protections simply because a contract expires during negotiations.
- Promotes stability for working-class families by guaranteeing that wages and working conditions remain consistent, preventing financial uncertainty for essential public safety workers.
- Prevents municipal employers from using the threat of contract termination or benefit cuts as a leverage tactic to force concessions from the union.
Cons for Progressives
- Could lock in outdated disciplinary procedures found in old contracts, potentially making it more difficult to implement police/fire reform or hold officers accountable for misconduct.
- May restrict the ability of municipalities to reallocate funds from public safety budgets to other underfunded social services if expensive contract terms are indefinitely extended.
- Reduces the urgency to modernize labor agreements, which might delay the implementation of new progressive policies regarding diversity, equity, and inclusion within the department.
Pros for Conservatives
- Ensures the continuity of essential emergency services, maintaining law and order and protecting property by minimizing the risk of labor disputes or strikes.
- Provides operational predictability for town managers, ensuring that shifts and command structures remain stable while new terms are being negotiated.
- Eliminates the administrative burden of constantly drafting and signing temporary contract extensions during prolonged negotiation periods.
Cons for Conservatives
- Locks taxpayers into paying for potentially expensive and unsustainable benefit packages indefinitely, removing the leverage elected officials need to control government spending.
- Undermines the democratic process by binding current taxpayers and elected councils to the financial decisions and terms agreed upon by previous administrations.
- Disincentivizes unions from negotiating in good faith to eliminate inefficiencies, as they can simply rely on the "evergreen" clause to keep favorable terms from the past.
Constitutional Concerns
None Likely
Impact Overview
Groups Affected
- Firefighters
- Municipalities
- Labor Unions
- Taxpayers
- City Councils
Towns Affected
All
Cost to Taxpayers
Amount unknown
Revenue Generated
None
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Bill Status
Current Status
Held
Comm Passed
Floor Passed
Law
History
• 01/09/2026 Introduced, referred to House Labor
Bill Text
SECTION 1. Section 28-9.1-17 of the General Laws in Chapter 28-9.1 entitled "Firefighters’ Arbitration" is hereby amended to read as follows:
28-9.1-17. Continuance of contractual provisions.
All contractual provisions contained in a collective bargaining agreement entered into pursuant to the provisions of this chapter shall continuein the following collective bargaining agreement unless either the bargaining agent or the corporate authority shall, in writing, within the thirty-day (30) period referred to in § 28-9.1-7, propose a change in any contractual provision. The parties may agree in writing to continue all contractual provisions contained in a collective bargaining agreement until such time as the parties enter into, and have ratified or arbitrated, a successor agreement until such time as a successor agreement has been reached between the parties or an interest arbitration award has been rendered.
SECTION 2. This act shall take effect upon passage.
28-9.1-17. Continuance of contractual provisions.
All contractual provisions contained in a collective bargaining agreement entered into pursuant to the provisions of this chapter shall continue
SECTION 2. This act shall take effect upon passage.
