Acting on a request from the Pennsylvania Convention
Center, a federal judge Monday ordered a stay in the racketeering case
convention center officials filed against the carpenters’ union. The union
agreed with the center’s request to delay the case, perhaps signaling a
rapprochement between the two parties.
U.S. District Judge Nitza I. Quinones Alejandro ordered
the case to resume Dec. 31.
In May 2014, the carpenters’ union lost the right to work
in the building and the union’s jobs were taken over by other unions,
particularly the stagehands’ union. The carpenters’ union protested its
exclusion and, a year later, the center countered with a racketeering suit that
accused the union of committing acts of vandalism and disruption that
interfered with the center's business.
After the suit was filed, the local carpenters’ union
leader was forced out by the union’s national leaders, who said his ouster was
not connected to the lawsuit. The center, with the agreement of the union, has
sought and received extensions on the federal case and a related case before
the Pennsylvania Labor Relations Board.
This is the second delay sought in the federal case.
Source: Philly.com
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