WHEN STATE Rep. Brendan Boyle joined American Postal Workers
Union protesters this week in front of the bulk-mail center in Northeast
Philadelphia, it was the second time in two months that he fought to keep
hundreds of good jobs on Byberry Road.
Looking down the street, Boyle could see the old
Nabisco/Kraft snack-food bakery on Roosevelt Boulevard, where he spoke out last
month against current owner Mondelez International's plan to close the plant
next year, terminating 320 good-paying jobs.
Boyle said they will become low-wage jobs in Mexico.
On Thursday, Boyle returned to Byberry Road to march in
front of the Philadelphia Network Distribution Center, with union workers
loudly protesting the United States Postal Service's plan to open 1,500
nonunion ministations in Staples stores.
"This is the Postal Service's attempt at de facto
privatization by outsourcing good-paying union jobs to Staples," Boyle
said. "I'm strongly opposed to privatizing what is essentially a public
service."
Ron Dever, of the Northeast's Sandyford Park section, has
worked at the bulk-mail facility for 27 years. "We have to fight this on
every front because if they are able to do it in Staples, they won't stop
there," Dever said.
"Next, they'll be putting nonunion ministations in
Walmart and Kmart," he said. "It's a way to bypass good-paying
jobs."
Chuck Camp of Holmesburg, who has worked for 25 years at the
bulk-mail center, said: "They're taking work away from unionized window
clerks and giving it to untrained, minimum-wage Staples workers. We start at
$15 an hour. I don't think Staples even tops out at that."
The protesting postal workers wore blue T-shirts emblazoned
with red stop signs and the slogan, "Stop Staples. The U.S. Mail is NOT
for sale!"
Union president Vincent Tarducci, of Bustleton, who has worked
at the bulk-mail facility since 1980, said: "We are not opposed to post
offices in Staples stores as long as they are staffed by postal workers in
uniform who took the oath of office and believe in maintaining the sanctity of
the U.S. Mail.
"We are officially boycotting Staples," he said.
"We're now using Office Depot instead. Maybe tomorrow we'll use Office
Max. This protest will continue for as long as it takes."
Boyle, who is running in the Democratic primary for the 13th
Congressional District, gazed down Byberry Road. "At the Mondelez plant,
we are fighting back-door outsourcing to Mexico," he said. "Here, we
are fighting backdoor privatization.
"This is a hardworking, middle-class area. Very
stable," he said. "Both the Mondelez closing and the Staples postal
stations would destroy middle-class jobs here."
Source: Philly.com
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