As job walk off enters third week, negotiations are going
nowhere.
Signaling
that strikers from Verizon Communications may stay off the job for an extended
period, the company said on Friday that it would add “thousands” more employees
and contractors to cover for the missing workers.
Most
of the nearly 40,000 strikers work in servicing or installing wireline
telephone and FiOS Internet and television service. Verizon had previously said
it would replace the strikers with “thousands” of non-union employees who had
been specially trained to replace them.
The
new cadre of replacements will be drawn from employees on special assignment
and contractors currently enrolled or recently graduated from the company’s
technical training program, the company said. Verizon also said about 1,000
strikers have returned to work since the strike began on April 13.
The
strikers countered that Verizon’s replacement workers were creating safety
risks, citing incidents where wires that were hung too low and an improper
telephone pole installation.
“Union
line personnel who perform potentially dangerous jobs at Verizon start their
careers with an intensive month-long training course, receive specialized
instruction for specific tasks, and then work closely with experienced techs
for three to five years before they’re ready to handle all aspects of the
work,” the Communications Workers of America union said in a statement.
A
similar job action against Verizon VZ
-0.16% in 2011 lasted only about two weeks. But it took the two sides another
year to agree on a contract.
On
Friday, Verizon said that since the current strike began, the thousands of
replacement workers it already deployed have “successfully resolved tens of
thousands of repair dispatches, tens of thousands of inquiries in our customer
service centers and have fulfilled thousands of new Fios orders.”
The
announcement of more replacement workers caps a tense week during which the company’s executives met with representatives for the two
unions involved, the CWA and the International Brotherhood of
Electrical Workers, in Philadelphia and New York on Thursday. Verizon made what
it called a “last, best offer,” but the unions said the offer was disappointing
and not serious.
Since
the strike began, the unions have complained that Verizon wants to outsource
call center jobs to Mexico and the Philippines, increase the use of non-union
contractors and assign workers to another city for up to two months at a time.
Verizon has said it needs greater flexibility to cut costs at a time when
wireline services are shrinking.
Source: Fortune.com
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