Union carpenters plan to sign a new pact with trade show
industry contractors Tuesday that will include customer service training,
safety training, and the establishment of drug-free workplaces, the union and
contractors announced Monday.
While the pact, dubbed the “value-added commitment,”
includes union carpenters in Philadelphia, it will not change the situation at
the Pennsylvania Convention Center, where union carpenters have not done trade
show work since May 2014.
“It’s not like we’re going to wake up and say, `Never
mind. We don’t have a customer satisfaction agreement,’ ” said the Convention
Center’s chief executive, John McNichol.
However, he said, “it sounds like a good agreement to
have in place. I think it’s a strong signal to be sending to the industry,” a
sentiment echoed by Bob McClintock, who heads the convention division of SMG,
the West Conshohocken-based company that manages the Convention Center and
other centers and arenas around the nation.
In May 2014, carpenters lost jurisdiction to work
in the building when their leaders did not sign a new customer
satisfaction agreement by a management-imposed deadline. The leaders signed a
few days later, but by then, the carpenters’ work had been divided among other
unions, particularly union stagehands and laborers.
“I think the most significant thing is the standardized
training throughout the entire district,” said Michael Capelli, United
Brotherhood of Carpenters Eastern District vice president. The district
includes five regional councils, from Maine to Washington, including the
Northeast Regional Council, which is based in northern New Jersey and covers
the Philadelphia area, all of New Jersey, and most of New York state, but not
New York City.
That way, no matter where union carpenters work, they’ll
have the same skills, whether they are in customer service or installing
exhibits, Capelli said. He said that the union will also more strictly enforce
drug provisions in collective-bargaining contracts. “This is a pilot,” he said.
“If it works, we’re going to expand it across the Brotherhood.”
Also signing the pact will be leaders of the Exhibition
Services and Contractors Association (ESCA) and the Exhibitor Appointed
Contractors Association (EACA). ESCA represents the general contractors who
build huge trade shows, such as the Democratic National Convention. EACA
represents the contractors whom individual exhibitors hire to set up their
booths, which often include complex stages and multimedia platforms.
A key provision of the pact allows free movement of labor
within the district. This is important because many contractors, particularly
EACA contractors, have their own crews of union carpenters. The contractors’
crews may set up and dismantle the same exhibits at trade shows in multiple
cities. In the past, depending on the center, those contractors would not have
been able to use their own crews, but instead would have had to hire from the
local union hall.
“Contractors can bring their own core crews with them,”
allowing them to work more efficiently, Capelli said. “This way they can be
more competitive” in bidding for clients.
In Philadelphia, union carpenters in those crews would
still not be allowed to work at the Convention Center, but would have to hire
union stagehands and laborers through the center’s labor contractor.
The carpenters said discussions leading to the pact began
in March when union and convention industry leaders attended the union’s trade
show summit in March.
“The Carpenters came to us as employers to partner with
them to create the Value-Added Commitment for the betterment of the entire
industry,” Larry Arnaudet, ESCA’s executive director said in a statement.
Meanwhile, litigation continues from the carpenters
losing the right to work at the Convention Center in Philadelphia.
The center’s federal racketeering lawsuit against the
carpenters union is in the pretrial conference stage, with a potential trial
date in September 2018. The center accused the union of intimidation and
vandalism, saying it was in retaliation for losing the work.
The union has denied all charges. It filed a complaint
with the Pennsylvania Labor Relations Board, saying its ouster was illegal, an
allegation that the center denies. Both sides are trading briefs.
Source: Philly.com
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