The New York comptroller is getting involved in the
FairPoint labor dispute, using his clout with the company's biggest shareholder
to ensure the company's workforce is treated fairly.
Thomas DiNapoli expressed concerns about allegations that
FairPoint improperly declared an impasse in negotiations with unions
representing more than 1,700 workers.
DiNapoli raised the concerns in a letter to John Angelo, CEO
of a private equity firm that owns nearly 20 percent of FairPoint stock.
DiNapoli said he was writing as trustee of the pension fund for New York state
workers, which has invested in a hedge fund that's managed by Angelo's company.
"In our experience as a long-term institutional
investor, where a company has a constructive relationship with its workers and
provides sustainable retirement benefits, the company becomes a stronger, more
profitable and more enduring enterprise," he wrote in the letter dated
Sept. 3.
He asked Angelo to look into allegations that the
telecommunications company violated federal law by declaring an impasse and
imposing terms of the company's final contract proposal. He also asked Angelo
to report back.
A message left Angelo's company, New York-based Angelo,
Gordon & Co., wasn't immediately returned.
FairPoint officials said they properly imposed contract
terms after reaching the impasse. They also denied that they have refused to
meet with the union or that they've failed to bargain in good faith.
"We believe constructive relationships with workers are
important to a company's long-term success. We also believe that we have
bargained in good faith and believe that we are impasse because the unions did
not agree to our proposals, we did not agree to their proposals and that there
is a wide gulf between them," said spokeswoman Angelynne Amores Beaudry.
The North Carolina-based company that provides telephone
service and online connections in northern New England ended negotiations last
month by declaring an impasse. The Communications Workers of America and
International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers appealed to the National Labor
Relations Board.
The contract that's being imposed by the company freezes the
existing defined benefit pension plan and rolls contributions into a new plan.
It also allows the company to hire contractors, eliminates retiree health care
benefits for current workers and requires workers to share some health care
costs.
Source: New
Jersey Herald
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