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WSWS : Workers
Struggles : United
States
US telecom union ends strike at Verizon
By our correspondent
26 August 2000
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this version to print
Three days after the Communication Workers of America (CWA)
split the ranks of striking Verizon workers and ordered the majority
back to work, the union ended the walkout by the remaining 37,000
workers Wednesday with a package designed to boost the company's
productivity and competitive position. The agreement brings to
an end the strike, launched August 6, by 87,000 members of the
CWA and the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers (IBEW)
against the US's largest local and wireless phone provider.
The three-year agreement reached Wednesday night is essentially
the same as the one reached Sunday between Verizon and the CWA
and the IBEW that ended the strike for 50,000 telecommunication
workers in New York and New England. It includes a 12 percent
wage increase over three yearstied to increases in productivityand
certain limits on forced overtime, but fails to substantially
address workers' concerns over stressful working conditions, longer
hours and job security. (See accompanying interview with a Verizon
worker from Pittsburgh).
Members will vote on the contracts by mail over the next three
weeks.
Despite the predictable pronouncements by union officials that
the strike was a total victory, the deal was hailed
by corporate spokesmen and industry analysts for allowing Verizon
to boost workers' output and press ahead with downsizing plans.
The agreement gives us the flexibility we need to compete
in the Internet era, said Verizon's vice president and chairman
Lawrence Babbio. We will now be able to raise the bar on
our standards for service and productivity, he said.
The Wall Street Journal wrote that Verizon maintained
the ability to relocate workers to cut costs or respond to changes
in the increasingly competitive telecommunications industry. It
also gained more flexibility in transferring workers, and gets
to pick which installers handle its new DSL services. Verizon
considered the latter crucial, given the importance of DSL, which
is the phone industry's attempt to gain a share of the market
for high-speed Internet access. As details of the settlement
were made public Thursday and Friday, Verizon's stocks ralliedfrom
below $41 a share to above $43.
The deal followed the sabotaging of the strike by the union
leadership last weekend. On Sunday night negotiators for the IBEW
and CWA-North bargaining unitsmade up of former NYNEX employees
in the New York-New England regionsigned a deal with the
company. But negotiators for CWA-Southrepresenting former
Bell Atlantic employees in the mid-Atlantic statesheld out
on the issue of forced overtime and what type of work cable splicers
and service technicians can do in Pennsylvania. CWA President
Bahr was reportedly furious that the negotiators did not go along
with the deal.
The CWA and IBEW leadership then called off the walkout by
50,000 New York-New England workers and organized a virtual strikebreaking
operation against those who remained on strike in Delaware, Maryland,
New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Virginia, West Virginia and Washington
DC. When striking workers from New Jersey set up picket lines
at several Verizon locations in New York City and began winning
support from their co-workers, local CWA officials intervened
and instructed the New York workers to cross the picket lines.
This enabled Verizon to redirect calls for customer service, operators
and repair from the strikebound areas in the mid-Atlantic region
to New York and New England, effectively erasing any impact of
the ongoing strike.
The CWA leadership hurriedly worked to wrap up the strike fearing
that angry strikers would expand picketing in New York and New
England and re-ignite a full strike. On Tuesday evening Bahr was
forced to call for CWA workers to honor picket lines set up by
out-of-state workers. In addition to their New Jersey counterparts,
strikers from western Pennsylvania, Virginia and Maryland began
traveling to New York before the strike was called off Wednesday.
Disgusted with the conduct of the strike most workers stayed
off the job in protest on Thursday and many did the same on Friday.
Expressing the discontent among rank-and-file workers, Charlie
Acker, a New York worker with 30 years service, told the World
Socialist Web Site it was practically tyranny
the way the union ran the strike. There was no discussion,
he continued. We weren't told anything. On Monday Joe Conley,
the vice-president told workers to cross the picket line. It wasn't
until Wednesday that they said don't cross. He added, We
won't see the contract for weeks. Then it will come like a big
300-page book so it's hard to know what the changes are.
Verizon was formed from the merger of Bell Atlantic (which
had previously taken over NYNEX) and GTE in June. Many workers
fear that the new company will seek to move work to non-union
areas where it can hire workers at lower wages and benefits. The
new agreement allows Verizon to transfer about 800 jobs a year
out of the bargaining units.
In addition, rather than mandating the hiring of additional
workers to reduce workloads and stress, the union agreed to allow
the company to transfer work from one call center to another.
This allows management to use the threat of such transfers to
pit one section of workers against another.
The company gave some ground on the issue of forced overtime,
one of the most critical issues for Verizon workers. In the mid-Atlantic
states mandatory overtime will be reduced to 8 hours, and 7.5
hours for customer service representatives, per week. In the New
York-New England region up to 10 hours of forced overtime will
be allowed. The previous contract allowed between 10 and 15 hours
of overtime per week. However, an escape clause allows the company
to disregard these limits to meet the needs of the business
has been retained. Moreover, the contract also allows the company
to force workers to work overtime with as little as 2 1/2 hours
notice.
Customer Service Representatives will be given 30 minutes a
day during which time they can turn off their phone to write service
orders, report troubles, issue-billing corrections, record a customer's
account or any other work associated with a call. At all other
times they must be on the phone continuously. An escape clause
allowing the disregard of the 30-minute provision is also retained
in the contract.
Stressing his commitment to strengthen the union's collaboration
with management, CWA President Morton Bahr said the deal helps
sharpen Verizon's competitive edge. Presenting the CWA as
little more than a labor contractor, Bahr added, The agreement
assures Verizon the advantage of a stable workforce of the most
highly skilled and experienced people, and in many ways it gives
our members the ability to do their jobs even better.
In exchange for the labor officials' services, Verizon management
agreed to an expedited process to allow the CWA to organize workers
in its rapidly expanding, and chiefly non-union, wireless division.
Presently less than 50 of Verizon's 32,000 wireless workers are
unionized. Under the new contract the CWA can organize a quarter
of these workers if 55 percent of them sign cards to join. Access
to this segment of workers was a crucial aim for the union bureaucracy
which has steadily lost dues income and influence within the industry.
Since the 1984 breakup of AT&T, the CWA has lost about 100,000
members in telecommunication positions, mainly because of the
expansion of non-union operations.
See Also:
"So many people are on Prozac
or sick leave because of stress"
Verizon striker describes hi-tech speedup
[26 August 2000]
US union leaders split ranks of striking
telecom workers
[24 August 2000]
US: Forced overtime and jobs security
key issues in Verizon strike
[18 August 2000]
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