SEPTA’s management Friday laid out in detail its existing
contract with almost 5,000 workers, including bus, trolley and subway operators
threatening to strike, by way of illustrating why it thinks a strike is
unnecessary.
Members of Transportation Workers United Local 234 pay
$46 a month for medical care that Board Chairman Pasquale Deon described as a
Cadillac plan. They can retire at any age after
30 years of service and get their full pension, cannot be laid off, and,
with overtime, average $68,100 a year.
“I think we give these guys a really fair deal,” Deon
said in a conference call with members of the Inquirer Editorial Board.
Local 234 members disagree. With just three days before
their contract expires, the union’s 4,738 members are ready to strike if SEPTA
does not address pension disparities, the possibility of a big bump in
health-care costs. and work conditions the union says put the public in danger.
“I’m not agreeing to anything that treats my people as
second-class citizens,” said Willie Brown, president of the local.
Brown described minimal progress at the negotiating
table. Even policy changes that would not cost SEPTA more have been difficult
to resolve.
“It’s very slow,” he said. “The simplest things become
big issues. It’s almost like it’s not negotiations.”
A strike will begin if the parties don’t reach an
agreement by 12:01 a.m. Tuesday, and all three modes of transit will come to a
standstill in the city. Suburban buses and trolleys will continue to run.
Regional Rail is not affected. The last strike, in 2009, lasted six days. A
strike in 1998 lasted 40 days.
The pension, both sides say, is one of the biggest
sticking points in negotiations underway at the Sheraton hotel at 17th and Arch
Streets. Workers’ pensions are capped at $50,000. If they make more than that,
they keep paying into the system but do not reap the benefits when they retire.
This contrasts with those in management, union representatives have said, who
don’t have capped pensions.
The cap for workers is nothing new, SEPTA management
said. It’s been in place since 2005. And management’s uncapped pensions are a
valuable incentive to attract hourly workers to management jobs, said Rich
Burnfield, SEPTA’s deputy general manager. About half of the authority’s
managers are culled from the ranks of its workers, he said.
Union representatives rejected that argument, saying
hourly workers who move to a management job receive a considerable pay bump.
They say they simply want fairness, and that they have argued for a pension
that would allow workers to benefit from
the money they pay into the system without costing taxpayers more. Until
recently, workers were also contributing a larger percentage of their pay for
pensions than managers.
Unions have framed the current pension system as one in
which money paid in by workers subsidizes managers’ pensions, but Burnfield
said the contributions from the two groups of employees are tallied separately.
SEPTA has a $1.2 billion pension obligation that is about
62 percent funded. SEPTA is paying about $98 million into the system this
fiscal year.
On health care, SEPTA managers say they are considering
adjusting a plan that currently requires workers to pay about $552 a year for
health care, not including copays for appointments and prescriptions. Medical,
prescription, dental, vision and life insurance cost SEPTA $227 million in
fiscal 2017, a significant portion of its $1.4 billion operating budget.
SEPTA is proposing that workers can still pay their
current contribution, but in return would get minimal coverage. To get a plan
that matches their current benefits, union members argued, would cost them 11
times as much as they now pay, raising their annual contribution to about
$6,0000-a-year.
The union is also fighting for greater quality of life
for workers. Matters like bathroom breaks and down time between shifts may seem
trivial, representatives said, but they are critically important to vehicle
operators who have no flexibility while on the job and who can endanger lives
if they are working while tired. SEPTA counters by saying it is already taking
steps to adjust shifts, and questioned why these issues were being raised
publicly now.
“You don’t wait until a union contract to talk about
safety,” Burnfield said.
The 2009 TWU strike coincided with an election day, but
this year the strike could overlap with a presidential election in which
Philadelphia and its surrounding counties are poised to be a decisive
battleground. The city commissioners, who oversee elections, have said voters
should be able to walk to polls and a strike should not affect turnout, but the
possibility of a strike dragging out to election day has raised concerns.
Gov. Wolf is in contact with both union
representatives and SEPTA, spokesman Jeff Sheridan said, and is urging a
compromise.
SEPTA, for its part, says it will do whatever it can to
keep its labor dispute from affecting the election.
“I do not want to have a strike anywhere near an
election,” Deon said.
Source: Philly.com
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