About 600 members and supporters of Service Employees
International Union marched peacefully Tuesday, chanting and waving union
banners along Philadelphia International Airport's departures roadway and
demanding higher wages and better working conditions for nonunion PHL workers.
Six busloads of demonstrators wearing purple "32BJ
SEIU" T-shirts arrived in buses outside Terminal A and marched to Terminal
F. They were escorted by Philadelphia police and sat, at one point, in front of
Terminal C for speeches.
Many marchers were from out of town - as far away as
Virginia, Connecticut, Pittsburgh, and New York - and said they came to support
wheelchair attendants, sky caps, aircraft cabin cleaners, and bag handlers who
work for airline subcontractors and are demanding $15 an hour. (The bag
handlers work at luggage carousels and help passengers get their bags to the
curb for tips. A different group of baggage handlers who work directly for the
airlines handles bags on and off airplanes.)
Pablo Palino, who works for a cleaning company in
Manhattan and is a Local 32BJ member, said he and many others came to help the
Philadelphia workers.
"We support the people for what they want,"
Palino said.
Michael Anderson, a 32BJ member who works in security at
the Navy Yard in South Philadelphia, said, "I'm here because security and
all employees should have equal pay and equal rights."
SEIU 32BJ general counsel Walter M. Meginniss Jr.
notified the PHL workers' employers Tuesday that some employees planned to walk
off the job and stage "a short strike" between 11 a.m. and 2 p.m.,
and then would return to work their regularly scheduled shifts.
SEIU organizes airport rallies, which it often calls
"strikes," every couple of months, usually around holidays and at
busy travel periods. Tuesday's demonstration was timed ahead of the Democratic
National Convention to protest unfair labor practices and low wages paid by
airline contractors Prospect, PrimeFlight, and McGinn Security, organizers
said.
SEIU is trying to organize the 1,000 workers in a union.
Beginning July 1, 2015, the workers won an agreement with
the city to be paid $12 an hour, in keeping with a "living wage"
standard approved by Philadelphia voters in May 2014. Before that, they earned
as little as $7.75 an hour plus tips.
Now, the workers are demanding $15 an hour and voted last
week to authorize a possible "strike" during the convention.
The permit obtained by SEIU for Tuesday allowed the
workers to picket and hand out informational leaflets outside Terminals A, B,
C, D, E, and F. The permit stated that no more than 22 "picket
leafleters" may congregate at any one time outside each terminal, airport
spokeswoman Mary Flannery said.
As of Tuesday, SEIU had not obtained a permit to picket
during the Democratic convention.
American Airlines, which operates 70 percent of flights
at Philadelphia International, said the protest - like prior demonstrations by
SEIU - would not disrupt flights or operations.
"American Airlines is focused on giving our
customers the best possible service in Philadelphia," spokeswoman Victoria
Lupica said. "Our direct employees are already unionized with the
company's full support. SEIU endorsed the agreement reached last year between
American and the City of Philadelphia, which provided a $12-per-hour minimum
wage with four years of increases for the employees of our vendors. Protest of
that agreement such a short time later seems misguided."
Mayor Kenney issued a statement after last week's strike
vote, saying that the airport workers "deserve a living wage, paid leave,
and the right to form a union without interference from their employer."
Kenney said, however, that "we don't anticipate
these demonstrators will interfere with airport service during the DNC."
The mayor noted, "The city has very limited legal
ability to compel subcontractors" to pay higher wages.
"The administration has held several meetings with
all parties, one as recently as last week, to urge subcontractors to achieve
labor peace," he said. "This administration will continue to be
committed to advancing economic justice and fairness for the dedicated workers
at PHL."
Source: Philly.com
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