Transit union negotiators will not resume talks with SEPTA
until it provides extensive documentation on health-insurance and pension
costs, Transport Workers Union Local 234 president Willie Brown said Tuesday.
But Brown said a strike by transit workers "is not in
my immediate future." Union leaders have not called for a
strike-authorization vote.
"As long as we get some movement, we're going to
negotiate," he said.
In a phone conversation with reporters Tuesday, Brown
blasted SEPTA for paying much higher pensions to managers than to union
workers, calling it a "clash of the classes."
"We're all public employees . . . our benefits should
be the same," Brown said. "We draw from the same funding
source."
The last of four contracts for about 5,500 city and suburban
bus, subway, and other nonrailroad workers expired Sunday night, raising the
prospect of the first strike against SEPTA since 2009.
The two sides moved closer to a settlement last week, and
SEPTA spokeswoman Jerri Williams characterized SEPTA's proposal on Sunday night
as its "final offer" for a two-year contract.
SEPTA is now offering a two-year contract, as the union
requested, with wage increases of 2 percent the first year and 3 percent in the
second year. Workers would have to spend an additional 1 percent of their wages
on health-insurance premiums under the proposal.
SEPTA said it hoped "the union will return to the
bargaining table to resume discussions over a longer-term agreement."
The union says its latest proposal is for a two-year pact
with wage increases of 3.25 percent in the first year and 3 percent in the
second year, with no increase in health-insurance premiums.
SEPTA withdrew a proposal to change the union's pension plan
to require that new hires be placed in a separate plan that would be funded by
the employees with a contribution from SEPTA.
Brown said the biggest remaining issue was pensions.
Managers can earn larger pensions than union workers because
the calculation of a manager's pension continues to rise with salary, while a
union worker's salary, for pension calculation purposes, is capped at $50,000 a
year.
Brown said Tuesday that negotiations won't resume until
SEPTA provides documentation requested by the union in February and March.
The requests included all medical-claim data for TWU members
since August 2012, demographic information about union members, all pharmacy
data, earnings data on union members by job description, the years of service
of union members, the number of employees who retired since 2010 and their
pension eligibility, and actuarial valuations for the retirement plans for
management and union employees.
SEPTA chief financial officer Richard Burnfield said Tuesday
that much of the information could be provided by Wednesday and the rest would
be provided as soon as it could be compiled.
Burnfield said SEPTA management was concerned about rising
costs for health insurance, because of mandates from the state and federal
governments, and the cost of any increase in pension benefits.
Source: Philly.com
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