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200 members of the carpenters union converged on the Philadelphia Auto show at
the Pennsylvania Convention Center on Saturday to protest their lack of a
contract with the center's management.
Converged
is probably too nice a word. Invaded is more like it.
The
union says it was just exercising its right to free speech, handing out fliers
to people attending the big show, which drew 60,000 people on Saturday.
The
center's management - citing eyewitness reports and surveillance videos - said
that the carpenters came in waves, beginning about 12:30 p.m., and engaged in
repeated acts of harassment and vandalism: stuffing auto interiors with
leaflets, stealing fuses and knobs on dashboards, removing oil caps and ripping
out wiring.
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The
evidence that management presented at a quickly called hearing on Sunday was
enough to convince Common Pleas Judge Maria McLaughlin, who issued a
restraining order on Sunday banning further protests inside the center until
after the auto show leaves today.
This
is only the latest protest by the carpenters at the center, but it was the most
intense and certainly the dumbest.
The
carpenters and their leader, Edward Coryell Sr., are furious because they no
longer work at the center. Their tasks were taken over by four other unions,
who still are working because their leaders signed a new agreement with the
center's management last spring, agreeing to work-rule changes to make life
easier for exhibitors and convention agents. The union's reputation for labor
hassles was killing business at the center and something had to be done.
Coryell
and a unit of the Teamsters Union refused to budge and now they are on the
outside looking in - without a contract and without any work at the center.
Coryell
and the Teamster president say they were ready to sign the agreement, but were
"tricked" by the center's board. That's an odd claim. As their chief
negotiator, Coryell is paid $236,000 a year by union members not to be tricked.
Plus, Coryell sits on the board of the center and was present when decisions
were being made about the steps that management would take. He can say he
didn't like them, but he can't say he didn't know about them.
The
unions appealed to state and federal labor-relations boards, but lost both
cases in rulings.
Since
the carpenters left the house, business at the center has revived, new
conventions are signing up to meet here and even ones who vowed never to return
are reconsidering. That's good news for the city, where we depend on a thriving
leisure and hospitality industry for thousands of jobs.
A
thriving center means construction of new hotels, renovations of older ones,
plus more building projects in general. And who will work on these projects? Union
carpenters.
Which
makes the latest protest dumb. To "punish" the center, they are now
engaging in goonish protests designed to drive business away, which will only
shrink the number of union jobs outside the center.
Such
tactics call to mind the recent criminal shenanigans of the Ironworkers Local
401. Last month, after nine of his ironworkers pleaded guilty to conspiracy,
extortion and other offenses for their actions on nonunion job sites,
Ironworkers chief Joseph Dougherty was found guilty of using arson and
violence.
No
one has accused the carpenters of physical violence . . . except for the black
eye that Coryell just gave to himself and his members.
Source:
Philly.com
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