The vitriol displayed Monday by some of the city's most prominent labor leaders apparently has roots in a political battle last year over Gov. Corbett's $2.3 billion transportation bill.
At the time, a number of key unions - including Electrical
Workers Local 98 and Laborers Local 332 - lined up behind the bill, which is
expected to create a flood of jobs while funding bridge and road repairs.
However, Local 8 of the Metropolitan Regional Council of
Carpenters, whose representatives declined to comment for this article, opposed
the bill, citing a wage provision within it.
While the bill ultimately passed, John "Johnny
Doc" Dougherty, business manager of the Electrical Workers, still chafes
at the position of the Carpenters leaders, which he believes would have denied
work for his members as well as their own.
"There is a pattern developing of pettiness and bad
politics that are costing their own members job opportunities," Dougherty
said.
The dispute also caused a rupture between the Carpenters and
the Philadelphia Building and Construction Trades Council, which supported the
bill.
As the bill was debated, the Carpenters stopped contributing
dues to the council, a budget-disrupting move that was seen as retaliatory.
"We missed some paydays," said Pat Gillespie, business manager of the
trades council. "We missed some pension payments. We will get by."
The bad blood apparently continues, according to Gillespie,
with Carpenters crossing council members' picket lines at work sites in King of
Prussia and South Philadelphia this week. While the Carpenters have resumed
paying dues, they are paying only a fraction of their previous contributions,
Gillespie said.
"I hate to see it come to this," he said. "It
is not too draconian for me, but it is awful for the people who work for
me."
The Carpenters and Electricians are on opposite sides of the
dispute at the Convention Center over new work rules. Four of the six unions
that did work at the center signed new contracts that include Customer
Satisfaction Agreements. The Carpenters and the Teamsters did not sign before
deadlines passed last week. As a result, their work is being assumed by the
four signatory unions, which also include Stagehands Local 8 and Iron Workers
Local 405.
On Monday, the Carpenters and Teamsters each filed unfair labor
practice complaints with the National Labor Relations Board. They contend that
the center did not have the authority to unilaterally demand a decision on the
work rules while the unions were continuing to negotiate new contracts.
Daniel E. Halevy, regional attorney for the NLRB, said the
matter would be given priority status. He declined to say how long the process
might take.
Tuesday was quiet at the Convention Center, with no labor
unrest. That is in contrast to Monday morning, when leaders from the
Electricians, Laborers, and Stagehands led union members across Carpenters and
Teamsters picket lines. That triggered much animosity and bitter words.
Michael Barnes, president of the Stagehands, said he
supported the new work rules, designed to make the Convention Center more
competitive with other large convention facilities nationally. Barnes felt he
had no choice but to have his members cross the line and go to work.
"My only other option was to not sign the deal and have
my guys lose out on their second-biggest employer," he said. "We
weren't prepared to do that."
Dougherty on Monday had blamed problems at the center on the
Carpenters, whose actions, he said, were costing union jobs across the board.
That echoed his position in November, when the transportation
bill was in the balance. That bill provided $1.65 billion for bridge and road
repairs statewide and $500 million for mass transit projects.
The Carpenters opposed a provision that modified wage
requirements on smaller government-funded projects to reduce labor costs.
Gillespie called the provision a minor concession in a bill that would be a
boon for labor.
Dougherty said he was primarily interested in ensuring that
mass transit be funded. He said he believed the $500 million dedicated to mass
transit would be a precursor to his goal of seeing the Broad Street Subway
extended to the Navy Yard.
"That will be a game-changer for Philadelphia,"
Dougherty said. "Before the transportation bill, it did not seem a
possibility. Now it is closer to a reality."
Source: Philly.com
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