In December 1976, Pennsylvania Governor Milton J. Shapp appointed a Commission to review existing state legislation pertaining to public sector labor-management relations. During the previous fifteen years, a tremendous increase in unionization among school teachers, social workers, court employees, health care workers in state hospitals, firefighters, police and other public employees had occurred. In July, 1975, a dramatic, state-wide general strike of such employees created pressure for a review of the public employee laws, especially Act 195 of 1970 (The Public Employee Relations Act) and Act 111 of 1968 (The Police Arbitration Act). Some proponents of changes wanted to restrict the ability of public employees to strike, by imposing financial burdens or judicial penalties on workers engaged in legally prohibited strikes or through expanding the powers of the courts to impose injunctions during strikes. By contrast, public employee union representatives focused their attention on preserving existing legislation. Representatives looked to obtain leverage in the form of proposed mandatory agency fees for workers who benefited from union-negotiated contracts but would not join the union or pay union dues.
The Hon. Benjamin R. Jones, Chief Justice of the Pennsylvania Supreme Court, was appointed to head the Commission, whose members included Dr. Anne R. Jones, Associate Professor, Program of Social Work, the University of Pittsburgh; Attorneys Richard Kirschner (Philadelphia), Alex Satinsky (Philadelphia), John D. Killian (Dauphin County); and Thomas H. Lane (Dauphin County); Nancy M. Neumann, President of the League of Women Voters of Pennsylvania; John Ingram, Head of the Pennsylvania Economy League; and Gregory L. Coleman, Deputy Secretary of the Department of Community Affairs. Attorney William J. Atkinson served as Executive Secretary. The hearings opened in Harrisburg on April 5, 1977 and moved in succeeding weeks and months to Philadelphia, Erie, Pittsburgh, Wilkes-Barre and Allentown. The Commissioners heard from representatives of associations, administrators, public employee labor unions, legal counsel for various jurisdictions, and "public interest" organizations. In November 1977, a legislative hearing was held in Harrisburg where interested state legislators offered additional commentary, suggestions, and recommendations.
The collection, originally known as Pennsylvania Governor's Study Commission on Public Employe Relations, is organized into three series: Series I. contains Transcripts of Hearings held by the Commission, April-June and November 1977. Series II. Contains a Statement before the Commission by the Pennsylvania School Boards Association in re: Teachers rights under the law. Series III. includes Studies/Reports of the Commission and other State agencies.
No restrictions.
Gift of the Pennsylvania Labor Relations Board, May 1986.
Pennsylvania Governor's Study Commission on Public Employee Relations (Jones Commission) Records, 1977, AIS.1986.03, Archives & Special Collections, University of Pittsburgh
Pennsylvania Governor's Study Commission on Public Employee Relations (Jones Commission) Records, 1977, AIS.1986.03, Archives Service Center, University of Pittsburgh
Records of the Pennsylvania Governor's Study Commission on Public Employee Relations (Jones Commission), 1977, UE/Labor 86:3, Archives Service Center, University of Pittsburgh.
This collection was processed by David Rosenberg in 2004.
Revision and rearrangement for the encoded version of the finding aid provided by Dan Horvath on May 10, 2004. Information about the collection title and the controlled access terms was extracted from the MARC record in the University of Pittsburgh catalog Voyager ID number: 4307384
Permission for publication is given on behalf of the University of Pittsburgh as the owner of the physical items and is not intended to include or imply permission of the copyright holder, which must also be obtained.