The irony of the situation isn't lost on Phil DiMaio Jr.,
a union janitor who, until last Friday, picked up trash, vacuumed hallways, and
swept sidewalks outside the gleaming 34-story high-rise apartment building at
2116 Chestnut St.
Now, with new owners and new building management, DiMaio,
33, and 12 other janitors, engineers, and security guards are out of work,
fired from a building with a long labor history.
Non-union workers now hold their jobs.
"It's a pretty sad state of affairs to know that
this building helped guys like us, and then new owners come in from out of
state and out of the city and kick guys like us to the curb," DiMaio said.
DiMaio and his co-workers plan to rally Wednesday
afternoon at the site. On Monday, they asked the building's manager, Lee
Senior, to give them their jobs back - any salary, union or non-union, but have
not received a response.
Senior declined to comment, as did other executives from
Greystar, the Florida-based property management company hired by the building's
new owners, CBRE Global Investors, in California.
"The workers in question were not employed by the
property. They are employed by a third-party property service company. It is
customary for property service contracts to end when a multifamily property is
sold," CBRE spokeswoman Pam Barnett said.
Buildings are bought and sold every day. New owners hire
new managers who, in turn, often choose outside cleaning companies and security
firms. Workers come and go.
But not every building has the labor history of 2116
Chestnut St.
In 1950, the Sidney Hillman Medical Center of the Male
Apparel Industry of Philadelphia, with its rich stone facade, opened at 2116
Chestnut to provide health care to unionized textile workers, employed in a
vital sector of the city's economy.
The unions' names, which changed over time, are
well-known - the International Ladies' Garment Workers' Union, the Amalgamated
Clothing and Textile Workers Union, and the Union of Needletrades, Industrial
and Textile Employees.
By 2011, most of the city's textile work had disappeared.
That's when the building was sold to John Buck Co., in
Chicago, to be razed and rebuilt as a $100 million apartment complex with
funding from the state and from an investment fund controlled by the
International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers and an association of union
electrical contractors.
Before the 321-unit apartment tower reopened in 2013,
John Buck Co. approached Local 32BJ of the Service Employees International
Union and told the union that it would hire union cleaning contractors and
security, an SEIU spokesman said.
Construction had not been completed when DiMaio started.
As crews finished constructing apartments, DiMaio and others cleaned them for
rental. Many have been employed in the building since it opened.
"We've been with these people 24/7," DiMaio
said, with residents and workers agreeing that a special bond had been formed.
In general, particularly with Center City office
buildings, when cleaning, security, and building management change, the union
staff is retained, say officials from the union and from the Building Owners
Labor Relations group, which negotiates with SEIU.
That did not happen when CBRE installed Greystar as the
property manager after closing on 2116 Chestnut St., paying $160 million for
the building, according to published reports.
These days, a one-bedroom, one-bath corner apartment with
a balcony rents for $2,750 a month.
Source: Philly.com
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