Janitors and other custodial workers in many of
Philadelphia's major buildings have authorized a strike if negotiations between
the building owners and the janitors union don't lead to an agreement by
midnight on Thursday.
The janitors have been asked to contribute more toward
their health insurance costs, and the building owners want to freeze the
workers pensions. In addition, owners are looking to scrap pension program
altogether for newly hired janitors, according to Gabe Morgan, vice president
of the Service Employees International Union's Local 32BJ.
"We're not bargaining with people who don't have
money. We're not bargaining over money," said Morgan at a Tuesday rally
across the street from City Hall in front of hundreds of janitors wearing
purple union shirts and holding "ready to strike" signs.
"These people have all of the money is Philadelphia.
This is the richest 10 blocks in this city, and nobody knows that better than
you, because you take care of it," he said.
The 2,800 janitors clean offices in nearly 170 building
throughout the city.
The bargaining janitors have voted to authorize a strike
before in recent years but have resolved contract issues before they had to
walk.
But this labor showdown, according to the janitors, is
proving particularly contentious. Morgan said negotiating sessions with the
Building Owners Labor Relations Inc. are scheduled all week and will push well
into the night Thursday until, and if, a deal is struck. A spokesman for the
building owners was not immediately available for comment.
Audra Traynham, a janitor who works in the Science Center
in University City, said she views the building owners' offer as an attack on
her wages and pension.
"Those things also say whether me and my family are
gonna stay afloat," said Traynham, adding that her union job has helped
her raise her four kids.
"I cannot afford health insurance, I can't afford
poverty wages," she said. "I'm trying not to go back to poverty wages
-- that's why we're out here doing what we need to do."
The average union cleaner makes about $16 an hour, yet
the SEIU said that's far below a living wage for one adult supporting one
child, which it pegs at $23 an hour.
Source: Newsworks
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