In yet another bid to get union carpenters back into the
Convention Center, the head of the union faxed a letter Tuesday to Gov. Corbett
"to clear the air and provide you with an accurate picture as regards our
union."
The governor has not seen the letter, his spokesman said.
The carpenters were ousted after their leaders did not sign
a new Customer Satisfaction Agreement by the May 5 deadline set by the Convention
Center Authority Board.
The union's work and the work of the International
Brotherhood of Teamsters Local 107, which also did not sign by May 5, have been
divided among the four unions that did sign.
The letter, signed by Edward Coryell, who heads Local 8 of
the Metropolitan Regional Council of Carpenters, repeated the argument that his
union did sign the agreement by May 10, when its contract extensions expired.
Coryell's letter said that the signed agreement was
hand-delivered May 9 but that convention center chief executive John McNichol
declined to accept it.
Since then, two show managers who have produced conventions
at the center, said efficiencies have improved with the work being handled by
four unions instead of six.
The letter suggests that, because all six unions have
signed, all should be allowed to work.
Without naming names, Coryell's letter attributes the
carpenters' woes to "ulterior motives and personal agendas at play."
Three union leaders, including John Dougherty, president of
the powerful International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers Local 98, led
their workers past a May 12 protest set up by the Teamsters after that union
was barred from the building.
Coryell's letter also referenced an article published in
Sunday's Inquirer describing how companies who produce conventions at the
center mark up labor costs, a standard industry practice nationwide.
"Unwilling to tackle this problem, [Gregory Fox, the
Convention Center Board's chairman] was content with the status quo," the
letter said, "and continued to perpetuate the myth that the unionized
workforce was the cause for high exhibition costs."
Source: Philly.com
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