PHILADELPHIA It felt a bit on Saturday like the quiet before
the storm.
The Convention Center was dormant. The doors of the
Carpenter Union headquarters at 18th and Spring Garden Streets were locked.
Don't be fooled. Behind the calm facade, tension was
building with the approach of Monday and expectations of a major labor
confrontation at the region's most important meeting facility.
It could be read in the spare language of a statement the
union issued Saturday: "The Carpenters will do what is necessary to right
this wrong and stand up for their members."
The "wrong" in question is a Convention Center
work-rules contract signed last week that eliminates the Carpenters as part of
the center's workforce.
The union, along with Teamsters Local 107, failed to sign
the agreement by a May 5 deadline set by the Convention Center board.
The two unions contend they were misled about the deadline.
Convention Center management is adamant there was no misunderstanding.
The result is the two unions have lost their positions at
the Convention Center and work that once went to their members is to be divided
among those unions that agreed to the new work rules - Laborers Local 332,
Electrical Workers Local 98, Stagehands Local 8, and Iron Workers 405.
"The signatory unions will handle the extra workload
cost-effectively and in the most hospitable manner possible," John
Dougherty, business manager for the electrical workers, said in a statement.
The work-rules contract, known as the Customer Satisfaction
Agreement, is the Convention Center's attempt to make the facility more
attractive to trade shows. The center, despite a $780 million expansion, has
failed to live up to expectations. Its management has placed the blame on
"antiquated work rules" that unnecessarily drove up costs for
exhibitors.
The agreement ratified Tuesday changes work rules at the
center to give exhibitors more flexibility in terms of putting up booths and
displays without union workers. It also gives Convention Center management more
control over which union workers are assigned.
The Carpenters and Teamsters made a belated attempt to
rectify matters Friday, when they unilaterally signed copies of the agreement.
It was too late, according to John McNichol, the Convention Center chief
executive officer. The agreement, as a signed contract, can be reopened only by
agreement of all who signed, McNichol said, including the four other unions.
The center on Monday is hosting the BIO World Congress on
Industrial Biotechnology. About 1,100 people are expected.
The Convention Center and Police Department have been
preparing in the event of trouble.
"We are taking steps to ensure the safety of everyone
who will be at the center," center spokesman Pete Peterson said Saturday.
The Police Department Division of Homeland Security and
Civil Affairs has been monitoring the situation at the center, police spokesman
Lt. John Stanford said.
"I'm sure they have a game plan in place," he
said.
Source: Philly.com
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