The International Union
of Operating Engineers Local 542, a union representing heavy machinery
operators, is coming under heavy fire from its minority members over
claims of racist behavior.
Local 542 has been under a consent decree from a federal court since
1979, after a series of incidents in which minority workers were beaten
in the union hall. The union still sends periodic updates to a "special
master" assigned to keep track of its practices toward minority workers,
but at the union's biannual meeting in May, and through other
complaints filed with its civil rights committee, workers of color have
alleged a pattern of discrimination and hate speech from within the
union, PlanPhilly reports.
At the meeting, according to PlanPhilly, a black union member stood up
and said into the microphone that he would not tolerate any more racial
slurs lobbed in his direction, punctuating his statement with, "I am not
a monkey."
Separate complaints to the union, some of which were acknowledged by
Local 542 spokesman Tom Danese, showed photos of the numbers 88 and 14 —
coded symbols of white supremacists — spray painted at work sites,
PlanPhilly reports. One minority worker reported seeing a noose hanging
from a crane, and several reported white supervisors using racial
epithets on job sites.
Perhaps more damaging to minority members of Local 542 is the disparity
in their numbers against the jobs for which they are hired. PlanPhilly
reports that over 21% of Local 541 members are people of color, but only
15% of job hours go to such members. While there is a civil rights
committee in place to hear those concerns, one anonymous member called
it a "dog and pony show."
Racism, Discrimination Complaints Mount Against Local Construction Union
Wikimedia/Thekohser
“Minority members of 542 have long ago lost trust in the civil rights
committee,” another union member told PlanPhilly. “Recently, however,
there has been a surge in complaints given to the civil rights committee
members.”
These allegations are coming to light just as Mayor Jim Kenney's Rebuild
initiative, meant to both foster public development and improve
diversity in building trades, has kicked into gear. Earlier in July, the
city appointed Philly-based, minority-owned Talson Solutions to help
ensure that minority-owned businesses get a fair shake at building
contracts. It is unclear whether Kenney plans to cast a wider net into
unions and job sites to address racial discrimination in Philadelphia's
construction industry.
Read more at: https://www.bisnow.com/philadelphia/news/construction-development/racism-discrimination-builders-union-local-542-77015?utm_source=CopyShare&utm_medium=Browser
Read more at: https://www.bisnow.com/philadelphia/news/construction-development/racism-discrimination-builders-union-local-542-77015?utm_source=CopyShare&utm_medium=Browser
The International Union
of Operating Engineers Local 542, a union representing heavy machinery
operators, is coming under heavy fire from its minority members over
claims of racist behavior.
Local 542 has been under a consent decree from a federal court since
1979, after a series of incidents in which minority workers were beaten
in the union hall. The union still sends periodic updates to a "special
master" assigned to keep track of its practices toward minority workers,
but at the union's biannual meeting in May, and through other
complaints filed with its civil rights committee, workers of color have
alleged a pattern of discrimination and hate speech from within the
union, PlanPhilly reports.
At the meeting, according to PlanPhilly, a black union member stood up
and said into the microphone that he would not tolerate any more racial
slurs lobbed in his direction, punctuating his statement with, "I am not
a monkey."
Separate complaints to the union, some of which were acknowledged by
Local 542 spokesman Tom Danese, showed photos of the numbers 88 and 14 —
coded symbols of white supremacists — spray painted at work sites,
PlanPhilly reports. One minority worker reported seeing a noose hanging
from a crane, and several reported white supervisors using racial
epithets on job sites.
Perhaps more damaging to minority members of Local 542 is the disparity
in their numbers against the jobs for which they are hired. PlanPhilly
reports that over 21% of Local 541 members are people of color, but only
15% of job hours go to such members. While there is a civil rights
committee in place to hear those concerns, one anonymous member called
it a "dog and pony show."
Racism, Discrimination Complaints Mount Against Local Construction Union
Wikimedia/Thekohser
“Minority members of 542 have long ago lost trust in the civil rights
committee,” another union member told PlanPhilly. “Recently, however,
there has been a surge in complaints given to the civil rights committee
members.”
These allegations are coming to light just as Mayor Jim Kenney's Rebuild
initiative, meant to both foster public development and improve
diversity in building trades, has kicked into gear. Earlier in July, the
city appointed Philly-based, minority-owned Talson Solutions to help
ensure that minority-owned businesses get a fair shake at building
contracts. It is unclear whether Kenney plans to cast a wider net into
unions and job sites to address racial discrimination in Philadelphia's
construction industry.
Read more at: https://www.bisnow.com/philadelphia/news/construction-development/racism-discrimination-builders-union-local-542-77015?utm_source=CopyShare&utm_medium=Browser
Read more at: https://www.bisnow.com/philadelphia/news/construction-development/racism-discrimination-builders-union-local-542-77015?utm_source=CopyShare&utm_medium=Browser
A year before the first Comcast tower opened for business
in 2008, as construction continued at a frenetic pace, a black union worker
named Paul Solomon was reportedly threatened with a noose. The incident elicited
outcry from members of City Council and the African-American Chamber of
Commerce, among others. To some, it was just another day in the long history of
racism in the local construction trade.
Now, as the second Comcast tower comes ever closer to its
own opening next spring, a sense of deja vu has beset some members of
International Union of Operating Engineers Local 542, the union that Solomon
belonged to. Several members of the union that represents crane operators and
other heavy-machinery workers — who spoke to PlanPhilly under the condition of
anonymity — say white supremacist symbols like the numbers 88 and 14 are commonly
found inside trailers and on worksites across the city manned by Local 542. And
they view the pro-Trump stickers slapped across beams and bannisters of the
skyscraper after last year’s election as just another sign of a groundswell of
racism.