The
Pennsylvania Convention Center opened for work at 7:45 a.m. Monday as IBEW
Local 98 leader John Dougherty, Sam Staten Jr. and Ryan Boyer of Laborers Local
332, and Michael Barnes of the Stagehands joined about 30 members of their
unions going into the halls to begin work on exhibits for the Bio 2014
industrial conference.
They
walked past picket lines of about 30 members of Teamsters Local 107, one of two
unions displaced from the center starting this week because their leaders did
not sign new work rules by last week's deadline. The pickets, along 11th St.
from Arch to Vine, were outnumbered by city uniformed and plainclothes police
officers. Other officers and supervisors stood on corners all the way west to
the center's Broad St. entrance. Agents of the Wilmington-based Gettier private
security agency checked credentials and turned non-employees away at center
doors.
About
five members of the other ousted union, Carpenters Local 107, picketed near the
center's 12th and Arch St. entrance, handing out a lime-green flier that
denounced "this heartless decision," and adding, "All we want is
fairness, the return of our jobs and the right to work." The Teamsters'
Sean Dougherty, coordinating pickets from 11th and Vine, referred questions to
officers at Local 107's Southampton office. Carpenters referred queries to
union chief Ed Coryell Sr. at the union's Spring Garden St. headquarters.
The
unions that are working today agreed to a new set of work rules that give
exhibitors expanded rights to set up their own booths without paying union
wages of around $25-50 an hour plus benefits; allows management to set up a
list of preferred Convention Center workers; and streamlines drug testing and
grievance rules. The Carpenters and Teamsters complained the rules would reduce
union work hours by as much as half.
The
center claims the rules will enable union workers to more than make up lost
hours by attracting many new shows. State taxpayers committed nearly $800
milllion to an expansion of the center, completed in 2011, which was supposed
to house up to 30 major multi-day shows a year, but only one-quarter to
one-half that number are scheduled for each of this and the next three years.
In his
office upstairs, Center CEO John McNichol Jr. said work is on schedule to set
up the Bio show, which is expected to draw 1,100 delegates including DuPont Co.
chief executive Ellen Kullman and other industry figures over the next three
days. Center general manager Lorenz Hassenstein moved quickly up stairs and
down the long central hallway, coordinating staff by phone.
The Bio
2014 show will open later today, "and we're looking forward to it,"
Bio spokesman Paul Winter said at a City Hall press event introducing a Dodge
fitted with a $200 manufacturers' kit that burns 85% ethanol. (According to
this Reuters story, U.S. Rep. Bob Brady, D-Phila, a member of the Carpenters
local now protesting the center, was instrumental in appealing to Vice
President Joe Biden, on behalf of the Philadelphia-area oil refinery operators
Monroe (Delta), Carlyle (Sunoco) and PBY (Delaware City and Paulsboro), in
delaying EPA rules that would have boosted mandatory ethanol fuel use above
today's levels.)
Asked if
leaders of the Carpenters and Teamsters had miscalculated -- both offered to
sign the new work rules belatedly, after the center's deadline and after the
other unions had agreed to new terms -- McNichol declined to characterize their
response.
Asked
about Teamster claims they were ready to sign but officers were out of town
last week, McNichol said, "Had we any indication from either union that
they had any intent to sign before the deadline, that would have potentially
changed the equation. But we didn't get that."
The
Carpenters' Coryell has argued that the center wrongly abandoned negotiations
on a contract extension and attempted to impose new work rules unfairly.
McNichol and other center officers have said these are two separate documents
and the unions understood the choices they were making.
"All
the contractors are moving forward," McNichol added, speaking of the firms
that set up and take down convention exhibits. "Like us, they don't have a
choice. They do this for a living."
Exhibitor
rules in Philadelphia have been controversial for years; why did the question
come to a head now? McNichol said the old 10-year agreement's expiration this
year set a "natural timeline" for new rules. He noted the board had
first brought in SMG and streamlined the center's administration before asking
for new work rules. "We had several
iterations of a deal on the table that I think labor would have viewed as more
favorable, but they couldn't come to an agreement. After last week's (May 1
Carpenter's) strike, it forced the board's hand. We had to draw a line in the
sand."
The board
laid the groundwork by binging in SMG, McNichol added. "A private operations
manager was a meaningful change," he said. "They have industry depth
and breadth and knowledge of best practices." He said complaints from
shows to the Philadelphia Conventions and Visitors Bureau dropped to near zero
since SMG took over late last fall.
Source: Philly.com
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