Walkouts Work! Breakthrough in Compensation Achieved
On Tuesday, September 10, thousands of WFSE members at over 130 worksites walked out of their jobs to draw attention to the need for a fair contract. The walkouts worked.
Two days following the walkouts, a tentative agreement for a 2025-27 contract was reached for WFSE's General Government contract, which includes most state agencies and the vast majority of WFSE members.
- Details of the General Government (state agencies) Tentative Agreement is posted here and has been sent out via email with information on voting.
- If you're in higher ed, an interpreter, an AWAAG or ALJ member, you can stay up to date with negotiations for your contract here.
Have Questions? Want to Vote in Person?
- If you have questions about a Tentative Agreement or you need assistance voting, visit a Voting Assistance Center (VAC). Click here to find a VAC near you.
How the General Wage Increase at GG Helps Even More Members
The tentative agreement at the General Government table will impact all public sector WFSE members.
Though negotiations for other contracts continue, the general wage increase achieved at the General Government contract often sets the minimum for what other contracts achieve. The financial gains are significant, especially in a difficult budget year.
Contract Negotiations Continue for Other Contracts
If you're not covered by the General Government contract, you can stay up to date with negotiations for your contract here.
At 12:00 pm on September 10, WFSE members statewide, from all employers, agencies and colleges, walked out of work and stood in solidarity to demand fair contracts.
WFSE members sent a clear message from over 100 worksites across the state:
We are demanding a fair contract for ourselves, our families, and the people who depend on our work.
Read more about the walkouts on our blog post:
During Walkout for Washington, Thousands of WFSE Members Walk Out for Fair Contract
For next steps, stay tuned for details on this Contract Negotiations page and on your contract's bargaining updates page.
Do you have video or pictures from your worksite's walkout? Send them here!
Watch the full Contract Campaign playlist on Youtube
Action to Build Support with the Public
Download the Flyer!
Let's show that the public is on our side! Print this sign and bring it to your favorite local businesses and ask them to display it in their windows. Take a picture with the owners holding the sign or when it's up in the shop window and send it to [email protected] or tag us @wfsec28 on socials. We'll give them free exposure as a union-friendly shop!
Quick Links
- Find Bargaining Updates for Your Contract
- See Pictures from Our Campaign and Download the Toolkit
- Learn about the Negotiations Process
- Submit a Quote and Picture Here to Support Your Bargaining Team
- Missing Updates? Provide Contact Info Here
- Not a Union Member? Join Here.
Download the Contract Campaign Toolkit
Signs, Posters, Social Media Graphics: Download the Toolkit Here!
Our theme for this year's contract campaign is United for Washington. There's a lot of pain and frustration in communities across our state. Many of the problems facing working families feel too big to tackle. Those are the problems that we solve as public servants.
As our bargaining teams negotiate at the table, we need our members to communicate to the public and our employers the value of the work we do and how we help each and every Washingtonian.
That's how we win public support and put pressure on management to give us the pay and the tools we need to do our jobs.
Learn About the Negotiations Process
Bargaining Teams Elected and Trained
After a weeklong vote in December and several run-off elections the first week of January, WFSE members selected the coworkers they want negotiating our 2025-2027 union contracts. Find your bargaining team here.
All WFSE members that negotiate our contracts undergo training to learn what wins at the bargaining table. Trainings are occuring between February and April. See pictures here.
Review Contract Proposals and Send Out Bargaining Survey
Throughout April, bargaining teams have been reviewing and vetting contract proposals that have been submitted by members over the previous year. Watch the video above to learn what "vetting" your proposals means.
After our bargaining teams review all the contract proposals from the membership, they will put together a bargaining survey containing the most requested contract priorities. Members will then be able to rank those priorities from most important to least important.
The survey helps our bargaining teams focus on what matters most to our members and develop campaigns as necessary to put pressure on management.
Contract Negotiations
With the information from the Bargaining Survey in hand, your bargaining team can begin crafting their initial proposal to the employer. The employer will develop their initial proposal, and negotiations will begin throughout April and May and continue through the summer until we have a tentative agreement that our members can vote on.
Once bargaining kicks off, you can find all updates for your contract posted here.
As Mike and Ashley explain in the video above, we cannot share precise details of what's occurring at the bargaining table until we've reached a tentative agreement that our members can vote on.
Who negotiates our contracts? Members do.
WFSE members negotiate our contracts alongside a negotiations expert from WFSE staff.
The members representing us at the bargaining table have serious responsibilities that affect the lives of thousands of WFSE members, including:
- Developing the initial bargaining proposal to be presented to the employer
- Negotiating with the employer
- Approving final contract language and making recommendations to union siblings on whether they believe the proposed agreements should be approved or rejected
Bargaining teams have the power to alter, modify, change, or concede on all issues to obtain the best possible contracts and reach a tentative agreement, or declare that the team has reached an impasse. They are truly your representatives at the table.