The recent focus on Philadelphia's building-trades unions
has primarily focused on battles at the Pennsylvania Convention Center and
surrounding other Center City projects.
Confrontations have also spread in recent years to Northwest
Philadelphia campuses, clubs and other sites. They have become an almost daily
occurrence at one prominent business along Germantown Avenue.
An intensified 'annoyance'
What began as occasional picketing at the Trolley Car Diner
in Mount Airy by IBEW Local 98 members over the use of non-union labor at
another project of diner owner Ken Weinstein has intensified into protests and
what he deemed as harassment from Monday through Friday.
"They are picketing at breakfast, lunch and dinner at
the diner and, on occasion, at the Trolley Car Café," Weinstein said,
referring to his East Falls eatery. "They have a way of stepping into the
street and into our driveway and stopping cars in order to annoy our
customers."
When the picketing began in February, Weinstein's loyal
patrons increased their visits to show their support.
"But now, it's just an annoyance," he said, noting
that the diner staff has been targeted with verbal abuse and offensive
gestures. "My servers are very unhappy, and they have nothing to do with
this."
Weinstein said he has had to call the police nearly every
day to keep the protesters from blocking customers' cars.
"The police sometimes come and cite them for these
disturbances," he said. "The police leave, and the picketers go right
back to what they were doing."
Weinstein said the union protesters have also told drivers
along Germantown Avenue that they suffered from food poisoning after eating at
the diner.
"These picketers have never eaten at the diner in their
lives," he said. "When the truth doesn't work for you, you resort to
harassment and bullying."
When asked for reaction, Frank Keel, spokesperson for Local
98, said, "Ken Weinstein's myriad lies do not even warrant comment."
No negotiations
When the protests began at the diner in the winter,
Weinstein and his son tried to bring the picketers coffee and doughnuts.
One protester politely declined the offer, but others
"turned to us and said, 'We know where you live and we will visit you.' It
was a direct threat."
Weinstein called the police and has a copy of the report
that cites two individuals for threatening behavior.
Weinstein has avoided contact with the protesters since then
and has made no attempt to negotiate with IBEW Local 98 business manager John
Dougherty or his representatives.
"When people lie and treat you this way, you don't want
to work with them at all," Weinstein said. "I would never hire a
union electrician after watching how they act. Why would you ever hire a union
electrician when they threaten you and your family?"
Conflict stems from Waldorf project
At the center of the dispute is the renovation of St.
Peter's Episcopal Church (Wayne Ave. and Harvey St. in Germantown), a grouping
of historic buildings designed by preeminent architects Frank Furness and
George Hewitt.
Weinstein's firm, Philly Office Retail, purchased the
property in early 2013 for $435,000, in order to transform it into the new
campus for the Waldorf School.
Weinstein hired the firm of McCoubrey/Overholser as general
contractor to oversee the estimated $6 million renovation of the buildings.
McCoubrey sought bids for the electrical work and received
three offers, including a union contractor whose bid was "30 to 40 percent
higher" than the others, Weinstein said.
"In our line of work, you don't always take the lowest
bid, but assuming all the bids are coming from quality contractors, you
certainly wouldn't take the bid from someone who is 40 percent higher," he
said.
The union protesters have never showed up at the St. Peter's
construction site, "which I find amazing, since that's what they're
protesting," Weinstein said. "They are intentionally deceiving people
who are driving by the diner into thinking we have unfair labor practices at
the diner."
The transformation of the church into the school is expected
to be completed by June 1, 2015.
The protests at the diner, meanwhile, have been going on for
more than three months, and "there is no end in sight," Weinstein
said.
Other Northwest Philly targets
Since the Trolley Car Diner has become a union flash point,
Weinstein said he has become a "magnet" for stories from other
developers and investors over union confrontations.
However, most are unwilling to discuss their problems
publicly.
"It's hard to get people to come out and be public
about this," he said. "I feel like I'm speaking out for all the other
developers and investors who have faced these problems."
Some of the problems are already a matter of public record.
One of the most notorious occurred in Dec. 2012, when the
non-union construction site of the Chestnut Hill Friends Meetinghouse was the
target of arson and sabotage unrelated to Local 98.
Just before Christmas that year, vandals torched the
construction crane, shaved off bolts and cut beams that could have resulted in
the collapse of the structure's steel columns and caused an estimated
half-million dollars in damage and delayed work by weeks.
In February, federal prosecutors announced a racketeering
conspiracy case against 10 leaders of Ironworkers Local 401, alleging violent
attacks against contractors, including the Chestnut Hill arson.
In March 2005, IBEW Local 98 was the subject of a complaint
filed with the National Labor Relations Board by the Springside Chestnut Hill
Academy for "confrontational conduct" on the campus.
U.S. District Court documents state that the union engaged
in "massing of demonstrators, amplification of loud music and aggressive
handbilling" to force the school from doing business with a particular
contractor. The case ended with a settlement between the parties and a
cease-and-desist order for the union to end the protests issued by the court.
Local 98 also demonstrated outside the gate of the West
Willow Grove campus of the Philadelphia Cricket Club and its other locations
from spring to fall 2013 to protest the use of non-union labor for an
electrical project, said Tim Muessle, general manager and chief operating
officer.
The protesters inflated a giant rat outside the gate, but
"people didn't pay much attention," Muessle said.
"There wasn't much to be done about it. The union bids
we received were double the winning bid, so it really was not even feasible to
try to negotiate," he said. "Because of the trouble at the Quaker
meetinghouse [in 2012], we upped security. Otherwise, there were a couple more
people at the gate each day to say good morning to."
Lost business and desperation?
Weinstein said he has heard from other Northwest
Philadelphia institutions that have been harassed by union protesters.
"There is clearly a focus on Northwest Philly" by
the unions, Weinstein said, and not necessarily because of an increase in
construction work in that section of the city. "I believe the reason is
that the building trades unions are getting more desperate.
"They're losing business in Center City because
developers and investors are getting smarter and are no longer willing to pay
the non-competitive rates the unions are charging. Because they're less
competitive than ever, [the unions] need to go to new areas, and that's why
they've latched onto Northwest Philly."
Weinstein said he is exploring legal tactics to stop the
protests against his business on Germantown Avenue.
"They're now bad-mouthing the diner, which they're not
allowed to do. The protest is against the development project," he
said. "I think IBEW has a very
serious public-relations problem, and by being out there at the diner every day
they're making it worse.
"They think that these protests will encourage
developers to hire them. I think just the opposite will happen."
Source: NewsWorks
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