Two years ago, as the clock ticked past midnight from May
10 into May 11, something momentous happened in the history of the Pennsylvania
Convention Center.
Bookings are up at the Pennsylvania Convention Center,
after years of decline.
The carpenters' union, which had been the main labor
union doing most of the work at the Convention Center, no longer had the right
to work in the building.
Since then, much has happened.
Bookings are up at the center, after years of decline.
And some conflict has subsided. The Teamsters, which also
lost jurisdiction with the carpenters two years ago, are back in the building.
Last month, the Teamsters dropped charges that they had
filed with the Pennsylvania Labor Relations Board.
"It's going very well," said Gregory Fox,
chairman of the Convention Center Authority board, which presided over the
carpenters' ouster and the hiring of SMG, of West Conshohocken, which
specializes in convention center management.
"The board is very pleased that the effort it made
to introduce a new service delivery model has been met with such enthusiasm by
our customer base," he said. "The atmosphere in the building is very
positive."
A new customer satisfaction agreement, signed in May
2014, allowed exhibitors to do more work themselves, cut down on expensive
supervisor hours, and shifted costs to unions with lower hourly rates.
Edward J. Coryell, who led a huge organization of union
carpenters stretching from Virginia throughout most of Pennsylvania, has been
ousted - forced into retirement by the national leadership of the carpenters'
union.
Years of regular picketing and lobbying by the carpenters
failed to yield enough pressure, political or otherwise, to return the union to
the building.
The Convention Center Authority filed a federal
racketeering lawsuit against the carpenters' union. That suit still is pending.
The carpenters' union filed unfair labor practice charges
against the Convention Center with the Pennsylvania Labor Relations Board. That
case also is pending.
"For 20 years we were telling our customers that
things were going to improve at the Convention Center," said Ed Grose, executive
director of the Greater Philadelphia Hotel Association.
"Now we need to work hard to win back their
trust," he said.
Symbolic of the change is the American Academy of
Neurology's decision to return to Philadelphia for its 2019 show.
On May 1, 2014, 12,000 neurologists were in town when the
carpenters' union staged a walkout during negotiations over the new customer
service agreement.
Neither the carpenters or Teamsters signed by the May 5,
2014, deadline imposed by management. Both wound up signing it a few days
later.
Even so, when their collective-bargaining agreement
expired on May 10, 2014, they were out.
The carpenters took a big hit, losing 167,879 annual
hours of work. Their work was redistributed to other unions that had signed the
customer satisfaction agreement.
Meanwhile, the neurologists' group, annoyed by the work
stoppage, told officials from the Philadelphia Convention Visitors Bureau that
they were canceling plans to hold their 2019 convention at the center.
"When they were leaving here, they told us they were
absolutely not returning to Philadelphia," said Julie Coker Graham, who
leads the bureau.
Now, she said, this organization and many others have
decided to come back, convinced by the hospitality industry's increased
"willingness to work together as a team" with the center's unions,
the bureau and the center's management.
It's big business.
In 2014, the 12,000 who attended spent 35,551 nights in
hotel rooms and generated $33 million for the city, and 2019's show should be
larger, the bureau estimated.
The Academy's chief executive, Catherine Rydell, said the
convention is the world's largest gathering of neurologists.
And, she said, in 2019, the Academy "is looking
forward to . . . meeting . . . in the beautiful and welcoming city of
Philadelphia."
Source: Philly.com
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