SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - San Francisco's famed cable cars
remained idle on Wednesday morning on the third day of a worker sickout, but
light-rail trains and buses returned to their regular routes as service
improved.
The San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency was
operating at about 70 percent of its normal service, up from 50 percent a day
earlier and 33 percent on Monday, spokesman Paul Rose said.
Rose said cable cars could also resume service in the
afternoon.
"The fact that we have more vehicles on the street than
the last two days leaves us cautiously optimistic," he said.
Workers and the San Francisco Municipal Transportation
Agency are at odds over a new contract. Workers overwhelmingly rejected a
contract proposal on Friday that union officials said would have resulted in a
pay cut.
The drivers' union president, Eric Williams, said Tuesday
that the labor group has nothing to do with the sick calls and urged those who
called out to be prepared to have a doctor's note.
The agency known as Muni runs buses, light rail and street
cars in addition to the cable cars and serves about 700,000 passengers each
day. Its operators, represented by Transport Workers Union Local 250-A,
rejected the contract by a 1,198-42 vote Friday, according to totals on the
union's website.
Williams declined to comment on operators calling in sick
because he said the union had no role in sanctioning the move. He sent a letter
to union members Tuesday urging them to only use sick leave for
"legitimate purposes."
The workers are not allowed to go on strike, but they can
call in sick.
Transit officials said those who reported being sick must
confirm they were ill to get sick pay and could be subject to discipline up to
being fired.
Williams told union members "to resume and continue the
excellent service we give the public" and that while having a doctor's
note is not normal practice, the agency has emphasized it because of the
callouts.
Mayor Ed Lee said in a statement that he joins riders
throughout the city in their frustration at the drivers who have
"irresponsibly abandoned their jobs and intentionally disrupted"
service.
"This cannot continue," Lee said. "I say to
our drivers, 'People count on you to do your job so they can get to
theirs.'"
The contract that Muni workers rejected would have given
them a raise of more than 11 percent over two years. However, it also would
have required them to cover a 7.5 percent pension payment currently paid by the
transit agency, said Rose, the agency spokesman.
The contract would have increased operator pay to $32 an
hour, making them the second highest paid transit workers in the country, Rose
said.
Williams said other city workers were getting a better
pension deal than Muni drivers.
"Our members are hard-working, and all we want is
fairness," Williams said.
Source: Philly.com
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