For Philadelphia-area commuters, the possibility of a
first-ever transit strike by all SEPTA union workers could loom large when a
federally mandated mediation process for Regional Rail engineers expires later
this year.
After that, the engineers, who have been working without a
new contract since 2010, would be permitted to strike. SEPTA's labor contract
with city bus drivers and subway operators has already expired, and contracts
with suburban operators and mechanics will expire in early April. If those
units and the engineers go out, SEPTA's unions would be able to shut down the
entire transit system for the first time in its 50-year history.
"If negotiations fail, the unions representing SEPTA
workers may all be on strike at the same time, idling bus, trolley, train, and
Regional Rail service for the first time ever," union leaders told SEPTA
workers in a newsletter this month.
Many of the union leaders whose workers are represented in
17 contracts with SEPTA met last month to discuss unified action against the
transit authority.
On Tuesday, representatives of SEPTA and the Brotherhood of
Locomotive Engineers and Trainmen, which represents Regional Rail engineers,
will meet in Washington as part of a continuing mediation process required by
the federal Railway Labor Act.
If the two sides are released from federal mediation, that
would start a 30-day "cooling off" period and a 240-day
dispute-resolution period required before a strike or lockout was permitted.
That period would expire in November or December, depending
on when a presidential board was created to investigate the long-running
contract dispute.
The engineers last went on strike against SEPTA for 108 days
in 1983, after the transit agency took over operation of the Regional Rail
system from Conrail.
A spokesman for the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers
declined to comment Thursday on the prospects for a rail strike.
"With everyone out, that's sort of like the nuclear
option," said Neil A. Morris, a labor-relations lawyer who represents
management, primarily in suburban Pennsylvania municipalities. "But that
could get the public on management's side and get legislators to move."
Earlier this week, State Rep. Kate Harper (R., Montgomery)
introduced a bill to prohibit strikes by SEPTA employees. But, unlike a similar
bill offered by Harper in 2009, after the last SEPTA strike, this version would
not require binding arbitration to resolve disputes.
"We simply cannot afford a repeat of the 2009 strike,
which occurred with no notice and left people stranded," Harper said.
"It crippled the city, and quite frankly, the customers deserve
better."
Willie Brown, the president of the largest of SEPTA's
unions, Transport Workers Union Local 234, has said the TWU would forgo its
right to strike in the current labor standoff, if SEPTA would agree to binding
arbitration.
SEPTA has declined.
SEPTA spokeswoman Jerri Williams said SEPTA management
"is committed to good-faith bargaining and remains ready to discuss the
issues."
The two sides have not met since March 13, and no talks are
scheduled.
Source: Philly.com
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