|
WSWS : Workers
Struggles : United
States
87,000 US phone workers strike Verizon Communications
By our correspondent
8 August 2000
Use
this version to print
Over 87,000 workers went on strike against Verizon Communications
Sunday morning after contracts between the unions and the country's
largest provider of local and wireless service expired at 12:01
a.m. August 6. The strike involves workers in 12 states along
the US East Coast.
Negotiators for both Verizon, formed by the merger of Bell
Atlantic and GTE in June, and the Communication Workers of America
(CWA) and the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers
(IBEW), reported substantial progress during negotiations Sunday
and Monday.
A statement issued by the CWA, which represents 72,000 of the
striking workers, said negotiations made progress in job
security, expanding opportunity in the growth areas of the company
and in organizing rights.

Job security is a major concern for workers in an industry
that experienced major downsizing in the early 90s. Since the
merger of Bell Atlantic and GTE the new company has indicated
its intention to further cut costs by shifting work to non-union
personnel and by merging work centers.
Job security and keeping jobs is the most importing thing
for me, said Anita Sommers, a technician in Pittsburgh with
26 years service. We have to stop the electronic transfer
of our work. All our work comes in electronically and they can
send it anywhere with a flick of a switch. Right now our work
has been transferred out of state and they can do that any time
they are ready.
The fastest growth areas for the new company are wireless,
data and long distance services, which are largely non-union.
Since the merger Verizon Wireless has become the largest wireless
provider in the US, with 25 million customers in all 50 states.
Revenue for the wireless division alone is expected to grow 86
percent between 1998 and 2003, compared with a 25 percent increase
for local services. Only 50 of the 32,000 workers in the wireless
division are unionized.
The CWA has placed great emphasis on obtaining the right to
organize among wireless workers. Neither the company nor the unions
have released details of the talks but the CWA had been seeking
an agreement in which the company would recognize the union if
half of the wireless employees sign cards expressing their desire
to join the union.
The company had been resisting this, saying that no other wireless
company is unionized and that such a measure would make the company
unable to compete. It is not clear if the company has accepted
the union's demand or if it has offered a compromise such as a
promise to remain neutral during a union recognition vote.
The union officials' demands for job security and
unionization have little to do with the defense of secure jobs
and decent living standards or working conditions. The CWA and
IBEW bureaucracies are chiefly concerned with stemming the loss
of further dues income and retaining whatever influence they have
left as Verizon positions itself as a major national and international
telecommunications provider.
Two years ago, the CWA also made job security the main issue
in its contract negotiations with Bell Atlantic. Then the officials
demanded the right to represent workers in nonunion subsidiaries
set up by the company to build and install lines and equipment.
Following a strike the union extended its franchise into many
of these areas, but these workerswhile paying dues to the
CWAcontinued to receive only a fraction of the pay and benefits
of workers at Bell Atlantic doing the same jobs.
In the current strike the CWA leadership has said little about
the fate of workers at Verizon's data or long distance services.
The company is in the process of splitting off these more profitable
operations, which include the Internet data services, into separate
divisions or companies. This has already happened in New York
and is under way in other regions. Verizon intends to retain its
less-profitable, and more heavily unionized, local phone service
as a separate division, posing the threat that it may be spun
off in the future.
In addition to the danger of further downsizing, other issues
of concern to the workers are the large amounts of forced overtime,
as well as stressful working conditions.
Our calls are constantly monitored,' said Chris Harding,
a repair technician in Pittsburgh. We are all in a line
for calls, as soon as we hang up another call may come in. After
I take a call, I may have to write up information, process a service
order or something. To do that I have to switch myself off line
so I don't get another call. If I am off line for more than 80
seconds, sometimes even less, I get a call from my supervisor
wanting to know what I am doing.
Even if I am on the phone with a customer and it is taking
a long time, I will get a call on another line from my supervisor
wanting to know what I am doing and why is it taking so long.
When we get up to go to the bathroom they are monitoring us and
we can't take too long even for that.
Lorraine Gamble, a technician with two years service, said
We are forced to work eight to ten hours a week overtime.
They will come up to you just before the end of your tour and
ask if you want to work. If you say no,' then they will
say that you are being forced and then it is insubordination if
you don't. Now they just come with statement asking would you
like to volunteer or do you want to be forced.
It is impossible to plan anything, because you never
know when you will have to work, even on your days off they can
make you work four extra hours.
Another 24,000 workers at Verizon represented by the CWA, and
15,000 by the IBEW, are not on strike. The contracts of these
workers, formerly employees of GTE, don't expire until a later
date. However, 1,400 CWA members in Lexington, Kentucky and parts
of North Carolina, whose contract has expired, may join the strike.
In addition to being the largest wireless provider, Verizon
operates the largest local phone service in the US and is a major
provider of telecommunication services internationally. The company
has 63 million access lines going into 33 million households in
31 states plus Washington, DC and Puerto Rico. Internationally,
the company operates in over 40 countries and is a major owner
of several global fiber optic networks. In 1999, Verizon collected
more than $60 billion in revenue.
See Also:
$116 billion merger of US
telecommunications giants Bell Atlantic and GTE
[24 July 2000]
Workers
Struggles: Telecommunications
[WSWS Full Coverage]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |