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Letting Federal Unions Protest Improper Contracting-Out, Charles Tiefer Apr 2001

Letting Federal Unions Protest Improper Contracting-Out, Charles Tiefer

All Faculty Scholarship

In 2000 - 2001, a judicial and General Accounting Office (GAO) ruling precluded federal employee unions from protesting the government's alleged violation of the rules governing the contracting-out procedure because the parties lacked standing. These rulings illustrate how outdated procedures have insulated the government from challenge, and have become matters of particular importance as the government increases its practice of contracting-out. Although these rulings have not closed the tribunal doors to federal employee unions, they have made protests much more difficult, leaving federal employee unions without a forum to protest violations. To better serve the needs of contractors - and …


Comments: A Return To State Sovereignty: How Individuals With Disabilities In Maryland May Still Seek Relief Against State Employers After Board Of Trustees Of The University Of Alabama V. Garrett, Geoffrey G. Hengerer Jan 2001

Comments: A Return To State Sovereignty: How Individuals With Disabilities In Maryland May Still Seek Relief Against State Employers After Board Of Trustees Of The University Of Alabama V. Garrett, Geoffrey G. Hengerer

University of Baltimore Law Review

No abstract provided.