WASHINGTON,
Dec. 16, 2014 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- School bus drivers and monitors in Santa
Rosa County, Fla., who are members of Teamsters Local 991 in Mobile, Ala., have
won another victory in a decision handed down by the National Labor Relations
Board (NLRB) in Washington, D.C. The December 4 ruling orders the workers'
employer, Durham School Services, to "cease and desist" failing and
refusing to recognize and bargain with Teamsters Local 991.
"We
applaud the NLRB's decision. It's time for this company to recognize the
workers' decision to be represented by the Teamsters Union," said Jim
Gookins, Secretary-Treasurer of Teamsters Local 991.
"It's
wonderful news, but it's only wonderful news if Durham will adhere to the
Board's request," said Diane Bence, a Durham school bus driver who helped
lead the charge to join Teamsters Local 991. "My co-workers and I will
remain vigilant and continue to urge management to meet with the Teamsters to
begin the collective bargaining process."
Bence
is one of 180 Durham school bus drivers and monitors who transport children to
schools in Milton, Pace and Navarre, Fla. Since voting overwhelmingly in February
2013 to join the Teamsters Union to improve safety and working conditions, she
and her fellow school bus workers have been fighting alongside their union to
gain recognition from Durham School Services, the nation's second-largest
student transportation contractor.
On
May 9, the NLRB in Washington, D.C., ordered certification of the election and
found appeals by Durham to overturn the 2013 election had no merit. Two weeks
later, Durham's attorney responded with a letter to Teamsters Local 991,
defiantly stating its "refusal to bargain."
Despite
the opposition from management, however, the Santa Rosa workers refuse to be
scared or silenced. In September of this year, they participated in a
"just practicing" picket outside the school district's Professional
Development Center to protest Durham's failure to follow federal labor laws.
The drivers and monitors have stood united since their Teamster election,
appearing at Santa Rosa County School District School Board meetings to raise
serious school bus safety concerns.
"After
22 months, this company needs to abide by the law and bargain a fair contract
expeditiously and in good faith," said Gookins, who reached out to Durham
management in Navarre, Fla., the same day the Board announced their decision. Durham
has still yet to provide a response.
The
Teamsters represent Durham workers across the United States and have been appealing
to Durham's United Kingdom-based parent company, National Express, to improve
its treatment of workers in North America.
The
Teamsters Drive Up Standards campaign to improve safety, service and work
standards in the private school bus and transit industry began in 2006. Since
then, more than 37,800 North American school bus and transit workers have
become Teamsters.
For
more information on Drive Up Standards, visit www.driveupstandards.org.
Founded
in 1903, the Teamsters Union represents 1.4 million hardworking men and women
throughout the United States, Canada and Puerto Rico. Visit www.teamster.org
for more information. Follow us on Twitter @Teamsters and "like" us
on Facebook at www.facebook.com/teamsters.
Source: PR
Newswire
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