About 500 Philadelphia International Airport workers
walked off the job Thursday in protest of their wages. Afterward one employer
announced that its workers would receive pay increases "in the near
future."
Employees from Prospect Airport Services, one of several
airport subcontractors whose workers are wheelchair attendants, baggage
handlers and airplane cleaners, were on the other end of that announcement.
The nonunionized workers from Prospect and PrimeFlight
Airline Services took part in the work stoppage to protest their employers'
failure to pay them $10.88 per hour. Mayor Nutter in May signed an executive
order raising the employees' wages, but only for new or renewing contracts.
The employees are set to receive raises in July. About
150 of them went to City Hall Thursday and asked Council to pressure their
employers to act sooner.
The workers filled a five-floor stairwell before dropping
two long banners from the railings, one reading "Poverty wages don't
fly." They were joined by several members of Council who led them in
chants that echoed through the cavernous space.
"If they don't take care of you, they will not get
another vote out of me," Councilman Curtis Jones Jr. yelled to the crowd.
After the rally, Jones said Council, during the budget
review, will look at whether airport contractors that do not pay the higher
wages are in violation of their leases with the city.
A spokeswoman from the Des Plaines, Ill.-based Prospect
declined to say exactly when the workers would receive raises. PrimeFlight,
based in Nashville, did not respond to a call for comment.
Airport spokeswoman Diane Gerace said operations were not
disrupted by the work stoppage.
Source: Philly.com
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