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Mechanics strike shuts down mass transit in Los Angeles
By Andrea Peters
15 October 2003
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Bus and subway mechanics in Los Angeles County went on strike
at 12:01 a.m. Tuesday, shutting down the mass transit system that
serves a region with 9.6 million residents. The 2,500 Amalgamated
Transit Union (ATU) workers are opposing the efforts of the Los
Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA) to
restructure the unions health insurance fund, impose a two-year
wage freeze and drastically reduce health benefits for retirees.
An additional 9,000 workers represented by other MTA unions are
honoring the ATU picket lines.
In walking off the job, the mechanics joined 70,000 grocery
store workers who are involved in a strike/lockout at the major
supermarket chains in Los Angeles and the whole of southern California.
The supermarket chains have launched a full-scale strikebreaking
operation to keep their stores open. They are demanding sweeping
cuts in compensation, benefits and pensions; more flexibility
in work assignments and hours of employment; and a permanent two-tier
structure with substandard pay and benefits for new-hires. The
supermarket employees, many of whom are forced to work on a part-time
basis, are among the lowest paid unionized workers in California
and the US as a whole.
These labor struggles, which are the largest in recent California
history, reveal the enormous social and class tensions that underlay
the California budget crisis and October 7 recall election. That
special election resulted in the ouster of Democratic Governor
Gray Davis and election of the Republican candidate, film actor
Arnold Schwarzenegger, as governor-elect.
Neither Davis nor Schwarzenegger, who will assume office after
the election results have been officially certified in mid-November,
have made any criticism of the union-busting methods of the supermarket
chains. Both big business parties, which postured in the recall
campaign as partisans of ordinary Californians and opponents of
special interests, have maintained a deafening silence
on the drive by the supermarket giants and the MTA to slash workers
jobs and benefits.
The rising cost of health care is at the center of the conflict
between the transit workers and the MTA. Currently, the transit
union oversees a $1.4 million monthly fund that provides health
benefits to its members. The fund has become insolvent because
insurance premiums have risen over the past year to $1.9 million.
The MTA is demanding that the mechanics cover the increased costs
by raising their out-of-pocket contribution to the health fund
from the current level of $6 a month to approximately $70.
The MTA is further insisting that it be given control of the
health fund, claiming that mismanagement by the ATU is responsible
for the current crisis. The MTA also wants to slash health care
benefits for retirees over the age of 65 to $142 a month from
the current level of $500.
The MTA proposal includes a two-year wage freeze, followed
by a 1.5 percent wage increase in the third and fourth years of
the contract. In an effort to turn public opinion against the
striking mechanics, the MTA took out a half-page ad in the Los
Angeles Times on Tuesday, claiming that the average annual
pay for a mechanic is $50,000 and suggesting the workers are overpaid
and greedy.
As workers in Los Angeles are well aware, it is virtually impossible
for a family to sustain a decent standard of living and pay the
bills on $50,000 a year. Basic living expenses in the area are
already high and are continuing to rise steeply, fueled in large
part by skyrocketing housing costs.
Indicative of the cowardly posture of the union officials,
the ATU leadership declared it was willing to accede to some of
the MTAs demands, but called the cuts sought by the city
authority too extreme. As a final effort to reach an agreement,
ATU made substantial concessions on health and welfare, but we
cannot abandon health care for our members and retirees,
wrote ATU Local 1277 President Neil Silver in a contract negotiation
update sent to union employees on October 13.
The MTA strike has shut down the entire public transit system
in Los Angeles County, with the exception of 22 bus routes operated
by private contractors and some local transit operations independent
of the MTA.
Approximately 500,000 people ride the countys 85 bus,
subway and light-rail routes every day. The vast majority of Los
Angeles residents commute to work and school by way of the citys
chronically congested freeways.
Because of the geographically limited character of the mass
transit system and its heavy reliance on slow-moving buses, the
MTA largely serves Los Angeless working poor and immigrantsthose
who cannot afford cars. According to a recent study by the MTA,
the average income of a bus rider is $12,000 a year and that of
a subway patron is $22,000 a year.
Reprising the pro-management role it played during a bus drivers
strike in 2000, the mass media has adopted a pose of sympathy
for low-income commuters in an attempt to split the working class
and foist the blame for the disruption in service onto the striking
workers.
Neither the ATU, the United Food and Commercial Workers (UFCW),
which represents the supermarket workers, nor the AFL-CIO union
federation has made any serious attempt to mobilize the working
class public in Los Angeles to stop the strikebreaking by the
supermarket chains and forge an alliance between the grocery workers
and transit mechanics.
In the course of the budget crisis of the past year, the unions
refused to carry out any industrial action to fight job cuts and
sweeping reductions in health care and other social services,
in order to shield their Democratic ally in the state house, Gray
Davis, who imposed the attacks on Californias working families.
In the recall election, the union leadership spent some $5 million
in a failed attempt to oppose the recall and simultaneously support
the main Democratic replacement candidate, Lieutenant Governor
Cruz Bustamante.
The silence of these two figures and the entire Democratic
Party leadership in California on the transit and supermarket
strikes underscores the bankruptcy of the AFL-CIOs support
for the Democratic Party and the fiction that this big business
party represents an alternative for workers to the Republicans.
The eruption of these strikes portends explosive struggles
in the coming months as the new administration in Sacramento seeks
to impose the weight of the ongoing budget crisis even more brutally
on the backs of the working class. It is crucial that workers
draw the lessons of the recall electionabove all, the need
to break with the two parties of big business and build an independent
political movement of the working class.
See Also:
California supermarket chains mount strikebreaking
drive against grocery workers
[13 October 2003]
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