It's been one year since carpenters union members lost
access to jobs at the Pennsylvania Convention Center after missing a key
deadline to agree to new work rules.
But a decision by the Pennsylvania Labor Relations Board
to review the case means the ongoing dispute about the Metropolitan Regional
Council of Carpenters' future means the issue will linger through the summer
and into the fall, when hearings on the dispute will likely begin.
Convention Center officials are unhappy with the board's
decision to review the case, but they're confident that they'll prevail in the
end. They marked Wednesday's anniversary by highlighting what one called the
"great year" that has followed the adoption of their new work rules
and the departure of the carpenters (along with the Teamsters, who also missed
last May's deadline).
Meanwhile, representatives for the carpenters union
denied any wrongdoing and vowed to get their members back on the job before
another year passes.
"This dispute is over a disputed deadline,"
said Martin O'Rourke, a spokesman for the union. "The carpenters have
agreed to all the new work rules, they have agreed to everything. They look
forward to going back to work at the Convention Center ... and doing the great
job they've always done."
The dispute over work rules and the carpenters' conduct
in the center has been bitter, and goes back years. The primary issue was the
requirement that union carpenters assemble exhibitors' booths, which critics
have said adds unnecessary costs and time, as well as discouraging customers.
Convention Center director John McNichol said the change
in the atmosphere has been dramatic since the work rules were changed, the
carpenters left, and members of the local stagehands union assumed most of
their duties.
"There's really a new culture here. It's much more
cooperative, much more customer-centric," McNichol said, "We're
saving time, we've saving money and energy, we've taken all the old legacy
issues of being hassle-ridden out of the equation."
A complicated squabble
The dispute has been complex from the start, with
representatives of the carpenters and Teamsters suggesting that the underlying
motive was to shift jobs to rival unions. Pennsylvania labor officials
initially ruled that the carpenters had no case, but reversed their decision
without explanation late last month.
State labor officials can't say exactly when they'll hear
the carpenters' grievance, but expect it to be sometime next fall.
McNichol called their decision to hear the case after
initially rejecting it "puzzling" but expects to prevail in the end.
Failing to do so, he said, would come at a cost:
Customers, he said, will leave if the carpenters come back.
"In all the discussions we've had with our
customers, they've made it abundantly clear that if we go backwards, if the CSA
[Customer Satisfaction Agreement] is rewritten and the work rules contained in
it change in any meaningful way, that not only would they consider not coming
back, but in some cases they've told us that they won't come back,"
McNichol said.
O'Rourke passionately disputes the notion that the
carpenters union is any more responsible for the Convention Center's various
business woes than any other union. He says the carpenters are fully prepared
to abide by any new work rules.
"The Convention Center is in this big PR spin mode
-- they're going to say anything," he said. McNichol's claim that the
center has scheduled 28 national conventions over the next five years since the
carpenters departure is, O'Rourke said, "highly questionable."
"It's just bad for business," to keep the
carpenters protesting on the street when they should be working inside,
O'Rourke said. "The carpenters believe that people should be reasonable
... evidently the Convention Center is not being reasonable, but they believe
reasonable heads will prevail."
Meanwhile, union carpenters including Tom McGuinness will
continue picketing the Convention Center, protesting daily from their spot across
from the Reading Terminal Market while they wait for their day in court.
"I liked working in the center," said
McGuinness. "You go in, you never know when you're getting out. Guys make
a lot of money here. And now they don't make anything because we're not in
there."
Source: Newsworks
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