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US actors vote overwhelmingly for strike authorization
By Alan Whyte
23 June 2004
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Actors voted last week by a 98 percent majority to strike if
there is no settlement with the League of American Theaters and
Producers by June 27, when the current contract expires. The strike
authorization was voted by the Actors Equity Association.
A spokeswoman for the union said the vote is a standard
procedural step and does not mean that there will be a strike.
The unions governing council will make the final decision
on whether to walk out or not.
A joint statement issued by the League and Actors Equity
appeared on the unions web site asserting that the two sides
have agreed to impose a media blackout on negotiations. However,
it has been reported that the major issues in dispute involve
health care and the producers use of non-union actors who
are paid less than union members.
The current production contract that covers actors in New Yorks
Broadway productions as well as those performing in national tours
has been in effect for four years. The major issue is the Leagues
growing use of non-union actors on road shows. Frequently, the
League will employ Equity actors for a Broadway production and
then employ non-Equity performers when the show goes on the road.
Road productions have reduced the percentage of union actors from
90 percent to 60 percent in the last 10 years.
The producers, however, have sought to exploit a deal made
by the union with Troika Presentations, a producer that is not
a member of the League, which allows it to use non-union actors.
Equity has maintained that it reached this agreement with Troika
because this producer opened its books revealing financial difficulties,
and that it also increased wages for union members as part of
the deal.
Another issue is a huge deficit confronting Equitys health
care fund. Though the deficit reflects the skyrocketing costs
of health care nationwide, it also is a product of the growing
use of non-union actors. Since the producers contribute to the
health insurance fund of the union, with fewer Equity actors working
there is less money going into the fund. Actors must now work
20 weeks a year instead of what was previously 10 to be covered
by the unions health care plan. As a result, many have lost
their benefits. Equity is asking the League to increase its contributions
to the health fund.
The League, on the other hand, is seeking to reduce the wages
for union actors on road shows. The League has stated that it
has already achieved an agreement with the Broadway stagehands
union that has made it possible for workers to receive lower wages
when on tour.
Actors Equity has 45,000 union members nationwide. Those
voting in the current dispute included some 6,000 actors who have
worked under the unions contract either on Broadway or in
road shows during the past eight years.
It is expected that any settlement reached between the two
sides will establish a pattern not only for the rest of Equitys
members, but also for workers from the other unions that are involved
in all the aspects of stage, television and film production. As
a result, the New York local of the American Federation of Television
and Radio Artists (AFTRA), the Screen Actors Guild (SAG) and the
American Federation of Musicians (AFM) Local 802 passed resolutions
supporting Actors Equity.
The musicians staged a four-day strike in March of last year.
With the support of the stagehands and actors, who refused to
cross the picket lines, the walkout closed down 18 Broadway musicals.
The musicians confronted issues similar to those facing the actors
in the current contract dispute. The Broadway producers were determined
to expand a practice of replacing musicians with canned
music.
With the strike winning support from other theater workers
and costing an estimated $2 million a day in revenues, New York
Citys Republican Mayor Michael Bloomberg and the media successfully
pressured the union leadership to settle. The resulting agreement
is expected to cut union jobs by as much as 25 percent while yielding
a significant reduction in production costs.
See Also:
Broadway musicians
end strike on minimums
[March 13, 2003]
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