I’ve read articles in local newspapers over the last two
years about the Philadelphia Convention Center’s lawsuit with the carpenters
union and wanted to tell you more about the Northeast Regional Council of
Carpenters and to set the record straight.
We are your brothers.
We are your sisters.
We are hardworking, middle-class Americans seeking what
all Americans seek: a good-paying job that puts food on the table; a chance to
get ahead and make a good, secure life for our families; health care that’s
there for us and our families when we need it; and a secure future, so we can
retire comfortably when we reach retirement age.
The Philadelphia Convention Center Authority’s attempts
to paint us as racketeers in its federal racketeering lawsuit against the
former Metropolitan Regional Council of Carpenters – which merged into NRCC in 2016 – are simply
incorrect and misguided.
In 2014, MRCC lost its right to work on projects at the
Philadelphia Convention Center, which was a blow to the organization and
thousands of male and female carpenters. While other unions crossed the picket
line and signed a new deal with the Convention Center, the carpenters were
forced out of their jobs when the Center declared that the MRCC had waited too
long to sign the agreement. In response to being locked out of their jobs, the
MRCC engaged in lawful protests at the Convention Center – including during the
2015 Philadelphia Auto Show – which were intended to raise awareness for worker
rights and seek to recover our right to work at the Center. These lawful
protests were an expression of our inalienable rights of freedom of speech and
the right to assemble; given to us by our founders in the U.S. Constitution
Instead of working with the MRCC on a resolution before
our lawful labor protests, the Philadelphia Convention Center Authority
illegally locked out our carpenters. As a result, NRCC has filed a lawsuit
before the Pennsylvania Department of Labor suing the Authority for lost worker
wages.
When the Inquirer revisits the history of the Convention
Center’s bookings in 2014 and talks about a complaint that labor costs were
“too high,” they are leaving out the key point that “costs” are money in the
pocket of middle-class Americans. “Costs” are how the health care of
middle-class Americans get paid by the carpenters union. “Costs” are how we are
able to set these hardworking Americans up for retirement by putting money away
for them in annuities and pensions. Aren’t these the hopes and dreams of all
hardworking Americans?
Since the lawful protests in 2015, the MRCC merged into
the NRCC in February 2016. The marriage of the two organizations brought our
union under one roof, and we now represent and protect the rights of nearly
40,000 hardworking men and women in Delaware, New Jersey and portions of
Maryland, New York and Pennsylvania.
As the executive secretary-treasurer at NRCC since 2015,
I have implemented a number of initiatives to enhance the ability of our
organization and its members to develop relationships with our contractors that
are professional and cooperative.
Since the merger, we have worked hard to ensure that the
NRCC’s culture is one of cooperation and problem-solving and not “us” against
“them.” It’s a culture that I’ve worked to instill in as many of our Team Leads
and Council Representatives as I can; as we are all hardworking Americans who
deserve the right to have a good paying job, health care that’s there for us
when we need it and the chance to retire with dignity.
Source: Philly.com
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