ATLANTIC CITY - More than 700 members of Unite Here Local
54, the union that represents most casino workers, let Trump Entertainment
Resorts Inc. know how they feel Wednesday about proposed cuts to their health
care and pension plans.
They staged a "civil disobedience" march
starting around 5:30 p.m., blocking traffic at the busy downtown intersection
of Arkansas and Arctic Avenues and causing massive gridlock. About two dozen
people were arrested and charged with resisting an officer's order or blocking
traffic, or both.
When asked for comment regarding the protest, Trump
Entertainment declined.
Carl Icahn, the billionaire investor known for buying
distressed properties, controls the fate of Trump Entertainment because he owns
$286 million in first-lien debt and stands first in line to be paid in any deal
to take the company out of bankruptcy.
As a condition of keeping the Trump Taj Mahal open, Icahn
wants massive concessions from labor and government.
Under the proposal detailed Friday in a motion to reject
Local 54's collective bargaining agreement with the Taj Mahal, union members
would have their pension replaced with a 401(k) plan, and lose their
company-paid health insurance.
With "this issue, you cut Atlantic City by pushing its
workers into poverty - [it] isn't going to work," Robert McDevitt,
president of the local, said at the march. "That's what Trump
Entertainment and Tropicana [also owned by Icahn] are proposing. [Icahn] is
trying to take advantage of the meltdown in Atlantic City and to scare all the
workers."
"It's unbelievable to me that the union is somehow
blaming me that the Taj may close," Icahn said last week in a statement.
For Michelle Brown, 36, of Atlantic City, who has been
working at Harrah's in the Marina for 16 years and now is in charge of public
areas and lobbies, the issue is cut and dried. She supports herself and her
16-year-old son on her paycheck and health plan.
"We want to support all our union members,"
Brown said.
As she marched, she and the others chanted, "No
contract, no peace! No health plan, no peace!"
The union, which has been trying to help nearly 8,000
workers who have been displaced by four casino closures this year, said it
requested six-month contract extensions from all the casinos it represents in
Atlantic City.
The only casinos to reject the request were Taj Mahal and
Tropicana, McDevitt said. He said Borgata, the three Caesars casinos, Golden
Nugget, and Resorts were all on board.
Source: Philly.com
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