PHILADELPHIA (CBS) — The Pennsylvania Convention Center has
reached an agreement with four of its six unions on work rule changes it says
will make the center more attractive.
The agreement allows exhibitors to do more for themselves.
Center president John McNichol says laborers, stagehands,
electricians, and iron workers have signed on to the new “Customer Satisfaction
Agreement.”
Among other things, it doubles the size of booths in which
exhibitors can use power tools and ladders, to 600 square feet.
McNichol says that for exhibitors, that’s huge.
“They’ll be able to make shows more profitable for
themselves, and we’ll be able to deliver shows at a greater economic benefit to
all of our customers,” he says.
And McNichol says that will mean more business for the
convention center and thus more jobs for local workers in the convention and
hospitality industries.
“It’s about serving as an economic engine for the region,”
he said. “That’s the promise of the
Convention Center.”
Not everyone is convinced.
Unions representing carpenters and teamsters declined to sign on. They’re working on a contract extension that
expires this Saturday.
Source: CBS
Philly
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