After more than a decade of pleas, talks, threats, and work
stoppages, the Convention Center board on Tuesday unanimously approved work
rules supporters say will attract more big shows to the underused,
taxpayer-built showplace.
The substantially altered rules are meant to make it easier
to fill hotels and restaurants with free-spending conventioneers. That is a
vision, heretofore unmet, on which a generation of Philadelphia's leaders have
bet Center City's economic future.
The board's action created a rift - noteworthy in a town
that has long considered itself rock-ribbed union - among the six unions that
represent the 500 or so workers at the Convention Center on any given day.
Four unions have signed on to the altered work rules. Two
others, Teamsters Local 107 and Carpenters Local 8, have not, claiming they
would lose up to half their working hours.
The center's chief executive, John McNichol, said he expected members of the four unions that agreed to the changes to work even if the two other unions set up picket lines.
One union leader expressed full-throated agreement with that
expectation. The Carpenters and Teamsters have contracts to remain working at
the center only until Saturday.
Lost hours should be more than offset by new shows requiring
more workers, Bob McClintock, senior vice president of SMG, the West
Conshohocken firm hired to manage the center last fall, told the board before
the vote. The board also agreed to 3 percent annual pay increases for the next
10 years for workers covered by the new rules.
The center's $780 million expansion, finished in 2011, was
supposed to draw up to 30 major conventions a year, but fewer than half that
many have been scheduled per year through 2017.
The new rules would:
Allow exhibitors to set up booths (up to 600 square feet,
double the present limit) with their own full-time employees instead of the
center's union workers.
Let exhibitors use stepladders and power screwdrivers to
build booths, and plug in their own computers.
Allow management to choose workers and foremen from a core
staff of experienced union workers.
Hasten dispute resolution between Convention Center executives
and union workers, instead of waiting for long-term grievance and arbitration
procedures.
Submit workers to a standard drug-testing program.
The four unions that approved the work rules are Laborers'
Local 332, Electrical Workers Local 98, Stagehands Local 8, and Iron Workers
Local 405.
McNichol had reason to be optimistic that members of the
four unions would do the work of the Teamsters and Carpenters if necessary, and
cross picket lines. "We'll do whatever it takes to make the center more
effective. We stand united with John McNichol," said Ryan N. Boyer,
business manager for the Laborers District Council, the largest of the unions
that agreed to the work rules.
"We need the business. We need this building
packed," Boyer added.
Asked if Laborers would be willing to cross picket lines,
Boyer repeated: "Whatever it takes."
"This won't be the end of things," said Edward C.
Coryell Sr., secretary/treasurer of the Carpenters district council. "We
won't be run out of this building and go away. That's not going to happen.
"I will do whatever's necessary to keep our members in
this building."
Coryell spoke during the meeting, interrupting a review of
the rules, to protest the way the board plans to implement them.
Asked about the prospect for labor strife, Mayor Nutter
said, "Negative reaction will only further damage the reputation of the
center."
Those in the hospitality trade have been impatient for the
new work rules. Jonathan Tisch, cochairman of the Loews hotel chain, on a visit
to Philadelphia in April, said his firm invested $20 million last winter in an
upgrade of its Market Street hotel, which faces the Convention Center's front
door, because he expected SMG to come through with long-awaited "new labor
contracts."
Jack Ferguson, president and chief executive of the
Philadelphia Convention and Visitors Bureau, says the city lost more than $1
billion in convention, hotel, restaurant, and services spending for 2014
through 2017 when groups "canceled or were lost to antiquated work rules"
at the center. He cited the True Value hardware cooperative and the National
Association of Fire Chiefs among groups that canceled.
The Carpenters, largest of the six unions working at the
center, staged a brief strike May 1 that center board members said gave them
more reason to act quickly on the new rules, before labor tensions became
further reason for meeting planners to pull shows from Philadelphia.
"The Carpenters were surprised by this ultimatum at the
last minute, when they were in the middle of negotiations," said Martin
O'Rourke, a spokesman for the union.
After picketing last week, the Carpenters returned to work,
agreeing to extend their contract until Saturday.
"Now they aren't returning our phone calls,"
O'Rourke said of the center's managers.
Heather Steinmiller, the board member (representing Nutter)
whose committee drafted the rules, said they were based on an 11-year-old
proposal.
Similar changes were recommended by board members and
managers under former chief executive Ahmeenah Young. Boyer, the Laborers'
leader, said previous managers were hampered by "political favors and
appointments."
"Politics plays a part in the building," Boyer
said. "SMG doesn't have that cross to bear, so to speak."
The move to a private manager gained momentum after Gov.
Corbett took office in 2011 and promised to privatize state-run industries.
Separately, private management has been backed by at least one union leader,
Local 98's John "Johnny Doc" Dougherty, who is active in Democratic
politics, and some of the board's minority Democrats, including Montgomery
County Commissioners Chairman Josh Shapiro.
"It's a great day for us," said Ed Grose,
executive director of the Greater Philadelphia Hotel Association. "It is
so important to our industry that we make radical changes. Meeting planners
have been hearing things are going to improve here for 20 years."
Source: Philly.com
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