Published on Portside (https://portside.org/)
Wabtech Union in
Erie Wins
Jessica
Corbett
March
7, 2019
Common
Dreams
After union
workers at a locomotive plant in Erie, Pennsylvania struck a 90-day deal with
Wabtec Corporation late Wednesday—ending the largest manufacturing
strike of the Trump era—Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) said the victory
"should send a message to corporate CEOs across the country."
"It is absolutely
unacceptable for profitable corporations to provide obscene compensation
packages to executives, while ripping off workers and their families," the
senator and 2020 presidential candidate said in a statement.
"Their
victory is not only a win for the workers at Wabtec, but for workers all around
America who are sick and tired of seeing their standard of living decline as a
result of corporate greed," he added.
Sanders helped
thrust the nearly two-week strike into the national spotlight by pledging his
support for the striking workers and inviting union leader Scott Slawson to
speak at his first 2020 presidential rally in Brooklyn on Saturday.
This campaign is telling bosses everywhere that they can't continue to keep
us in fear on the job
They're stealing
from us, and we're here to take what's ours
Watch @ueunion 506
Pres Scott Slawson explain why they're ON STRIKE again Wabtec
TWEET solidarity
to #Solidarity4UE pic.twitter.com/OXLyFbuvAr
— People for
Bernie (@People4Bernie) March 6, 2019
"The example
that Sanders is setting is vital, not just for his 2020 campaign but for all
the Democrats who are contending for the nomination," John
Nichols wrote for The Nation ahead of the rally. "Union
struggles are essential, not just for Democrats but for the fight for economic
justice in a country where the gaps between CEO pay and worker salaries, and
between rich and poor, has reached epic proportions."
The strike in Erie
kicked off on Feb. 26, when more than 1,700 members of the United Electrical,
Radio, and Machine Workers of America (UE) Locals 506 and 618 walked off the
job as Wabtec took control of the plant. Last year, Wabtec merged with GE
Transportation, which had operated the facility for more than a century and
maintained a contract with UE the past eight decades.
Wabtec has refused
to honor GE's contract—which, UE spokesman Jonathan Kissam told In
These Times, has provided generations of workers with "good, Rust Belt
jobs."
Those jobs have
afforded the plant's employees a more stable lifestyle, with wages that average
$35 per hour, and a Monday through Friday work schedule that Kissam says has
allowed UE members to be active participants in life outside of the plant.
"Our members are very involved in the Erie community as Little League
coaches, at churches and with veterans' causes," Kissam asserted in an
interview with In These Times.
It is this quality
of life, and this connection to the broader Erie community, that UE members are
trying to protect for themselves and future generations by going on strike,
Kissam says.
"People would
rather work than be on strike," Kissam added, "but they're not
willing to hand every aspect of their life over to the boss, and they're not
willing to create a permanent underclass of low wage workers."
Under the new
deal, workers are set to return to the plant on Monday. According to a
statement from UE, as talks continue to establish a new contract, workers and
Wabtec agree to:
- Maintain
wage rates for existing employees;
- Maintain
Wabtec's competitive benefits package;
- Voluntary
scheduled overtime with the company's ability to use non-bargaining Wabtec
employees to meet customer commitments;
- 90-day
moratorium on hiring new bargaining unit employees;
- No
plant closure or permanent layoffs during the term of the agreement;
- Grievance
procedure with binding arbitration; and
- No
strikes or lockouts.
"Both parties
are optimistic," the statement said, "that a mutually beneficial
collective bargaining agreement can be reached to position the Erie facility
for future growth, stability, and success."
While
congratulating the union workers "for their successful effort in standing
up for justice and dignity," Sanders urged Wabtec "to sit down at the
bargaining table and negotiate a fair contract with its union workers."
Congratulations to UE Locals 506 and 618 for their successful effort in
standing up for justice and dignity.
This is a victory
for workers across the country who are sick and tired of seeing their standard
of living decline as a result of corporate greed. https://t.co/rSp1E6jeLP
— Bernie Sanders
(@SenSanders) March 7, 2019
This
work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 License
Donations can be sent
to the Baltimore Nonviolence Center, 325 E. 25th St., Baltimore, MD
21218. Ph: 410-323-1607; Email: mobuszewski2001 [at] comcast.net. Go to http://baltimorenonviolencecenter.blogspot.com/
"The master class
has always declared the wars; the subject class has always fought the battles.
The master class has had all to gain and nothing to lose, while the subject
class has had nothing to gain and everything to lose--especially their
lives." Eugene Victor Debs
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