Loudoun Now for April 22, 2021

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n LOUDOUN

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VOL. 6, NO. 21

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Pg. 24

APRIL 22, 2021

Supervisors Head Toward Employee Unions BY RENSS GREENE

rgreene@loudounnow.com

the job done. As thousands of people roll up their sleeves at the county’s point of dispensing (POD) at Dulles Town Center each day, these front-liners handle reactions from tears of joy to extreme anxiety with

Loudoun supervisors have voted to see an ordinance that would bring collective bargaining to the county government’s employees. A new state law going into effect on May 1 allows local governments to recognize public employee unions. The law will allow employees to petition the local government for a vote, but does not let them force collective bargaining—the local governing body would then hold a vote to decide whether to recognize unions, and if so, what sort of discussions to have with them. Doing so also requires the board to adopt a local ordinance. Loudoun County administrators have said they expect to see the first petition filed on or shortly after May 1. Supervisors plan to have an ordinance ready in May, anticipating that petition from their employees, and have already approved eight new positions in the county budget to support collective bargaining. With a vote April 20 to write an ordinance enabling collective bargaining, a majority on the Board of Supervisors sought to take off the table a non-binding version, meet-and-confer, or an option to deny collective bargaining. The debate now moves to how Loudoun’s collective bargaining ordinance will be written, which will govern what is open for union negotiations. An example ordinance provided to the Board of Supervisors by the county attor-

HOT SHOTS continues on page 35

UNIONS continues on page 24

Renss Greene/Loudoun Now

Jeremy Mader gives a person a dose of a COVID-19 vaccine at the Dulles Town Center Point of Distribution.

Loudoun’s Hot Shots

Meet Those on the Front Lines of the Vaccination Effort BY JAN MERCKER jmercker@loudounnow.com

Throughout the pandemic year, superheroes have emerged in all walks of life. In 2021, some of the most visible heroes are Loudoun’s super vaccinators—on a

mission to get shots in arms and restore a sense of normalcy. These jab kings and queens include volunteer and career personnel from Loudoun’s Combined Fire and Rescue Services and volunteers from Loudoun’s Medical Reserve Corps, working together to get

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