SEPTA's biggest labor contract expires Friday night, but an
immediate strike by Philadelphia bus drivers, subway and trolley operators, and
maintenance workers seems unlikely.
Negotiations between SEPTA and union representatives
continued Wednesday at the Sheraton Philadelphia Downtown Hotel.
The contract with Transport Workers Union Local 234 covers
about 4,700 SEPTA employees in the city, roughly half of all the transit
agency's workers.
Separate contracts expire next month with TWU 234, Suburban
Transit Division, Victory District, which represents about 160 suburban
maintenance and clerical employees; and TWU 234, Suburban Transit Division,
Frontier District, which represents about 230 bus drivers and mechanics in
Montgomery and Bucks Counties.
Also expiring in April is a contract with members of United
Transportation Union Local 1594, Suburban Transit Division, Victory District,
which represents about 360 operators on the Media/Sharon Hill trolley lines and
conductors and operators on the Norristown High-Speed Line.
Although TWU leaders have alerted their members to prepare
for a strike, a walkout seems unlikely before the suburban contracts expire in
April.
And so far, no strike-authorization vote has been taken by
the TWU's members.
In the event of a strike, Regional Rail trains would
continue to operate because their crews are covered by separate contracts.
Train engineers have been working without renewed contracts since 2010.
Typically, any agreement reached by TWU 234 for its city
workers sets the pattern for SEPTA's 16 other labor contracts.
The TWU last went on strike in 2009, seven months after its
contract expired.
That surprise predawn walkout left thousands of commuters in
the lurch, drawing fire from Mayor Nutter and then-Gov. Ed Rendell. The strike
lasted six days.
The TWU had threatened to strike as the World Series was
being played in Philadelphia, but it did not actually go out until 3 a.m. Nov.
3, after the series left town.
Union president Willie Brown said at the time, "I
understand I'm the most hated man in Philadelphia right now. I have no problem
with that."
Brown, who lost his bid for reelection in 2010 to John
Johnson Jr., defeated Johnson in voting in September to regain the presidency
of Local 234. He is leading the negotiations with SEPTA.
The base salary for new SEPTA bus drivers is $33,887, and
drivers with four or more years of experience are paid $55,620 a year.
Including overtime pay, the typical TWU member makes $64,847 a year, SEPTA
spokeswoman Jerri Williams said.
"Whether or not there is a strike is in the union's
court," Williams said. "SEPTA management remains ready to address the
issues and explore common solutions, and we are hopeful that good-faith
negotiations will eventually result in a contract."
Jamie Horwitz, a spokesman for the TWU, said Brown "is
committed to getting a fair settlement for his members," but declined to
specify the issues that stood in the way of a settlement.
Source: Philly.com
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