September 5, 2010
State workers go to court over tech jobs
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CHARLESTON, W.Va. --  Long-simmering concerns among West Virginia's state employees about public technology jobs have boiled over into a legal challenge.

The West Virginia Public Workers Union Local 170 has sued the state's Office of Technology and its chief technology officer. It seeks to block Kyle Schafer and his agency from proposing any contracts that could outsource tech-related projects or jobs.

State officials aren't commenting on the pending case. Gov. Joe Manchin and other state officials have previously said they're not trying to privatize public jobs.

"I do not endorse layoffs for the sake of outsourcing," the governor told The Associated Press when asked about the subject in July. "That's not what we have to do to run a responsible government, and we've not run government that way."

But the Manchin administration also counts cutting costs and improving program efficiency among its top goals.

Affiliated with the United Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers union, Local 170 has previously complained that Manchin has allowed scores of state jobs to remain unfilled once they become vacant. It fears the state made follow the same path with technology slots.

Schafer told lawmakers during last month's interim meetings that West Virginia has saved millions since 2005 by centralizing technology infrastructure and making it consistent across state government.

Schafer said the state was considering seeking bids on a project to consolidate the writing and modifying of computer programs. Such services are now scattered among 31 different government bodies, costing the state more than $35 million a year, he told legislators.

"To date, not a single technology employee has been laid off or furloughed as a result of previous consolidation efforts," Schafer's agency said in an accompanying Aug. 12 statement. "This exercise is expected to be no different."

The legal challenge, filed last week in Kanawha Circuit Court, argues that Schafer and his office must first satisfy provisions of the 2005 law that overhauled the state's technology operations.

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State workers go to court over tech jobs

CHARLESTON, W.Va. --  Long-simmering concerns among West Virginia's state employees about public technology jobs have boiled over into a legal challenge.

The West Virginia Public Workers Union Local 170 has sued the state's Office of Technology and its chief technology officer. It seeks to block Kyle Schafer and his agency from proposing any contracts that could outsource tech-related projects or jobs.

State officials aren't commenting on the pending case. Gov. Joe Manchin and other state officials have previously said they're not trying to privatize public jobs.

"I do not endorse layoffs for the sake of outsourcing," the governor told The Associated Press when asked about the subject in July. "That's not what we have to do to run a responsible government, and we've not run government that way."

But the Manchin administration also counts cutting costs and improving program efficiency among its top goals.

Affiliated with the United Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers union, Local 170 has previously complained that Manchin has allowed scores of state jobs to remain unfilled once they become vacant. It fears the state made follow the same path with technology slots.

Schafer told lawmakers during last month's interim meetings that West Virginia has saved millions since 2005 by centralizing technology infrastructure and making it consistent across state government.

Schafer said the state was considering seeking bids on a project to consolidate the writing and modifying of computer programs. Such services are now scattered among 31 different government bodies, costing the state more than $35 million a year, he told legislators.

"To date, not a single technology employee has been laid off or furloughed as a result of previous consolidation efforts," Schafer's agency said in an accompanying Aug. 12 statement. "This exercise is expected to be no different."

The legal challenge, filed last week in Kanawha Circuit Court, argues that Schafer and his office must first satisfy provisions of the 2005 law that overhauled the state's technology operations.

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