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WSWS : Workers
Struggles : United
States
US telecommunications workers continue strike against Verizon
By our correspondent
10 August 2000
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Negotiations continued Tuesday between unions representing
87,000 striking telecommunication workers and Verizon Communications.
The strike by 72,000 workers represented by the Communication
Workers of America (CWA) and another 15,000 represented by the
International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers (IBEW) began on
Sunday morning. The strike effects Verizon in 12 states along
the East Coast from Virginia to Maine and Washington, D.C.
Differences over job security and the union representation
of workers at Verizon's non-union operations, particularly its
wireless division, remain the principal issues. Other issues,
such as forced overtime and working conditions, also remain unresolved.
On Monday the CWA reported that many of these issues were settled
in a proposal presented by the company 15 minutes before the expiration
of the old contract at 12:01 Sunday morning.
Verizon was formed in June by the merger of Bell Atlantic and
GTE. While Bell Atlantic was heavily unionized, much of the former
GTE was not. The company at first demanded the right to move six
percent of its jobs, since reduced to four percent, to non-union
areas.
Another job issue is the demand that Verizon stop shifting
work from its core company to a subsidiary known as BACCSI (Bell
Atlantic Communications and Construction Services Inc.) BACCSI
was formed five years ago by Bell Atlantic and operates in New
Jersey, Delaware, Maryland, Pennsylvania, Virginia, West Virginia
and the District of Columbia.
Two years ago, the CWA won representation rights at BACCSI
following a strike against Bell Atlantic. Workers at BACCSI receive
less than half the wages and benefits of workers at the core company
doing comparable jobs. The current dispute focuses only on which
job functions the CWA will permit BACCSI to perform.
We never should have allowed Bell Atlantic to set up
BACCSI, said an installer in the Pittsburgh region. They
have been doing our work; when they break something, we have to
go and fix it. They are getting a fraction of our wages and learning
to do our jobs. All the time the union is collecting dues from
both of us.
The rest of the telecommunication industry is carefully watching
the outcome of this conflict. Contracts between the CWA and AT&T,
Bell South, SBC and US West all expire next year.
During the past 15 years the number and percentage of unionized
workers have fallen dramatically. From more than 700,000 unionized
workers in 1984 the telecommunication industry now has a little
over 400,000 today.
AT&T, the largest long distance company, had 300,000 CWA
members in 1984. Today it has only 36,400, or 25 percent of its
148,000 workers. MCI-Worldcom, the second largest long distance
company and the largest carrier of Internet traffic, is completely
non-union. Sprint is only 13 percent unionized and Nextel, VoiceStream
and US Cellular are entirely non-union.
The CWA is seeking to represent most of the 32,000 workers
at Verizon Wireless, which is seen as the fastest growing sector
of the company. It is the largest provider of wireless services
in the US with 33 million customers.
Most of the automated network continues to operate, but operator
assistance in unavailable and Verizon is recommending that its
customers wait until the end of the dispute before seeking new
or additional service or to speak to a representative about billing
problems. Some 30,000 management personnel have been filling in.
On Monday, the first full day of picketing, thousands of workers
marched and chanted slogans outside 540 Verizon offices and work
locations throughout the region. Some 800 technicians in New Jersey,
members of the IBEW, joined the strike after the company took
disciplinary action against them because they refused to cross
a CWA picket line.
A Pennsylvania court issued an injunction prohibiting union
members from being within 200 feet of any Verizon building and
limited pickets to four, spaced 10 feet apart. Similar orders
have been issued in Delaware and New York.
Verizon is the largest provider of local and wireless service
in the United States 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,
D.C. and Puerto Rico, and 25 million wireless lines with a presence
in all 50 states, D.C. and Puerto Rico.
The new company is also a major provider of long distance and
data services. The company operates in over 40 countries and is
a major owner of several global fiber optic networks.
In addition to the workers who have walked out, another 24,000
workers at Verizon represented by the CWA and 15,000 by the IBEW
are not on strike. These workers are in areas formerly run by
GTE. Their contracts have not expired.
A reporter from the World Socialist Web Site spoke to
striking Verizon workers in New York City on the second day of
the strike.
One worker, Margie Riley, 18 years at the company, who works
in inside wiring, commented:
The major issue is job security. This is because the
future is in the wireless technology, and the company doesn't
want the union to represent the workers in that field. They need
union representation, and it is critical for us as well.
They want to contract New York work outside of New York,
and utilize workers with a lower rate of pay. That is, the company
does not want to pay workers union wages. In addition, they want
give-backs from us on such things as health and retirement benefits.
They are offering us nothing in the way of wages.
After the 17-week strike in 1989, we established a pretty
decent relationship with NYNEX. Things changed dramatically when
Bell Atlantic took over. They have been very hostile to us, and
they clearly want to break the union.
Their merger with GTE to create Verizon allows them to
greatly increase their long distance market. They are probably
bigger than AT&T.
Andres Caban, field technician, with five years at the company,
told our reporter:
I am upset that the Teamsters are allowing their members
to cross our picket line and deliver packages, especially when
our union supported their strike. We refused to give United Parcel
Service any technical telephone support when their workers walked
out.
The two major issues in this strike are contracting out,
and our need to organize the Verizon wireless workers. By making
it hard for us to unionize these workers, they are showing that
they want to bust the union.
Although right now less than half of the business is
in wireless, it is a rapidly growing field. In a few years, it
will be the majority of the company. We want the wireless workers
to enjoy the same wages and benefits that we have. Right now,
they make a lot less than we do.
This company is making money hand over fist, but they
don't want to share it with us. With this merger, they claim that
they need to cut jobs. They want to eliminate six percent of the
workforce. That would mean laying off 4,000 workers.
See Also:
87,000 US phone workers strike Verizon
Communications
[8 August 2000]
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