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March 20, 2008
CWA Gains Tentative Pact at Century Tel
Missouri
CWA reached a tentative three-year agreement with Century Tel
of Missouri which strengthens job security provisions and
safeguards seniority – two key issues in the talks –
and boosts wages, among other gains. The pact covers about
350 workers, members of CWA Locals 6301, 6310, 6311, 6312 and
6373.
Contract explanation meetings are being scheduled and the
bargaining committee has unanimously recommended ratification of
the tentative settlement.
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| CWA Local 6171 mobilizes at Century Tel
Arkansas. |
Meanwhile, the fight for a fair contract continues for CWA
Local 6171 members whose contract at Century Tel Arkansas
expired last August. The 169 workers are fighting back against
the company's attack on seniority and recall rights, among other
issues. Century Tel Arkansas presented a "final offer" to
members that was overwhelmingly rejected by the membership, and
the members fully support the efforts of the bargaining
committee, said CWA Telecommunications Vice President Jimmy
Gurganus. The committee continues to stand firm against
management's demands and more mobilization actions are in the
works.
The tentative Century Tel Missouri settlement provides for a
6.5 percent wage increase over the contract term, plus
improvements in in-charge pay, night differential and
compensated availability pay. For workers in some job titles,
the wage increases will be paid as annual lump sum
payments.
The agreement also protects workers' seniority rights and
improves recall rights and force adjustment procedures in the
event of a layoff. Current health care coverage,
including retiree health care, was maintained. The pension plan
for current workers remains unchanged; new hires as of March 12,
2008 will be covered under the Century Tel Retirement Plan.
The bargaining committee said the agreement "could not have
been reached without the mobilization efforts of Century Tel
members and locals." Bargaining committee chair and CWA
Representative Mark Franken praised committee members for their
"long hours and determination to win a fair agreement." In
addition to Franken, members were Gene Whitfield, Local 6310;
Danny Rice, 6312; and Gary Kolb, 6373.
Employee Free Choice Act Critical to 'Taking
Back America'
"Passage of the Employee Free Choice Act is essential to
setting a political agenda that benefits working Americans after
the 2008 elections," CWA President Larry Cohen said in an
address to more than 1,000 participants at the "Take Back
America" conference in Washington, D.C., this week.
"Passing EFCA and restoring workers' collective bargaining
rights is a critical part of any agenda to take back America,"
said Cohen explaining that "bargaining rights are the key to
creating and sustaining a middle class standard of living." He
decried the fact that the percentage of Americans with
collective bargaining rights is a fraction of what it is in
virtually every other industrialized country, and even among
newly emerging democracies like South Africa or Brazil.
Participants at the conference, sponsored by the Campaign for
America's Future, come from labor unions and other progressive
organizations who are developing a policy agenda for Congress
and the next president that focuses on the needs of America's
working families. Issues high on the group's agenda –
affordable health care, fair trade, fair economic policies,
quality education, and retirement security – mirror those
of CWA.
Stating that labor's success at the bargaining table and in
the political arena "have elevated workplace conditions and
middle class standards throughout America," CWA's president
asked conference participants to pledge to get 10
percent of their members to sign EFCA support cards as part
of labor's "Million Member Mobilization for the Employee
Free Choice Act."
"These cards are the faces of America and represent a pledge
to participate in our movement to rebuild the labor movement,"
said Cohen. These cards, along with photos of the workers who
signed them, will be presented to Congress after the November
elections.
'Tale of Two Countries' Video Looks at
Health Care in Canada
Canadian members of CWA talk about their country's health
care system and how it compares with the costly system in the
United States in a video that the Canadian Media Guild produced
for last year's CWA convention in Toronto.
The video is now available online on at
www.healthcarevoices.org/canada. The Health
Care Voices website features hundreds of stories, ideas and
concerns of CWA members and their families as part of the
union's fight for health care reform in the United States.
The March/April issue of the CWA News, which goes in the mail
next week, explains CWA's campaign for reform and looks at
differences between the publicly-funded systems of Canada and
Europe and the insurance-driven system in the United States.
In the video and in other interviews, Canadians indicate they
don't understand why Americans cling to a staggeringly expensive
system that leaves so many people without health care.
CWA Slams Western Union Plan to Close U.S.
Facilities
CWA is condemning Western Union Financial Services Inc., for
its announced plans to close three facilities in Missouri and
Texas and shift that work to non-union and overseas operations.
Some 640 workers in Dallas, Texas, and Bridgeton and St.
Charles, Missouri, members of CWA Locals 6377 and 6178, were
told they will lose their jobs over the next five months.
"It's apparent to me that Western Union has determined that
it would prefer to operate as a union-free enterprise,"
said District 6 Vice President Andy Milburn.
"CWA will do everything legally possible to stop these
centers from closing and stop Western Union from moving our work
to non-union operations, both in the United States and
overseas," said CWA Staff Representative Mike Neumann, who heads
the Western Union bargaining team.
Last month, CWA Local 6377 filed unfair labor practice
charges with the National Labor Relations Board against Western
Union, charging that company managers have tried to coerce union
members and subvert the bargaining process. The local also
charged that earlier layoffs announced by Western Union –
of 150 workers in Bridgeton and Dallas – were an act of
retaliation against the workers and the union for refusing to
engage in concessionary early bargaining.
Western Union said it plans to transfer the work to non-union
locations including Denver and offshore facilities in Costa
Rica, Manila, Mexico City and Mexicali, Mexico.
"Western Union is an American icon. Today, it has turned its
back on the very employees who built the company into a
multinational enterprise," said Earline Jones, president of CWA
Local 6377.
Olivia Espinosa, president of CWA Local 6178 in Dallas, said
"Western Union is a greedy, profitable company that doesn't seem
to care about the excellent customer service our CWA members now
provide. And that's bad news for customers."
Two Groups Honor Speed Matters Website for
Excellence
CWA's Speed Matters website, a critical part of the union's
campaign to push for affordable high-speed internet access
nationwide, has been honored by two organizations with awards
for its content, design and usefulness. The site was built
with funds from CWA's Speed Matters Strategic Industry Fund.
"We are proud to be recognized for our campaign and for the
exceptional work of our webmasters to bring it to life online,"
CWA President Larry Cohen said.
The American Association of Political Consultants, in its
annual Pollie Awards, gave a Silver Medal to the Speed Matters
site for "Best Use of Search Engine Marketing" and awarded it an
honorable mention for "Best Landing Page."
"The AAPC is the world's largest organization of political
and public policy professionals and the Pollie Awards are the
organization's signature annual event," the AAPC says in
materials about the contest. "Each year the prestigious Pollie
Awards recognize the best in political and public affairs
communications in 175 different categories."
The Institute for Policy, Democracy & the Internet named
the Speed Matters site as a finalist in its Golden Dot Awards
for "Best Website – Issue Advocacy Campaign."
"This year was a great success for the Golden Dot Awards as
we democratized both the nominating and voting process, bringing
it to the public via the Internet," the IPDI said. "There were
over 100 nominations and saw 4,000 votes in only a 5 business
day-long time period."
CWA's site did extremely well in the contest against tough
competition: The winner in the issue advocacy category was
www.TeamDarfur.org, the website of a coalition
of athletes committed to raising awareness about the Darfur
crisis and bringing an end to it.
The Speed Matters website is at www.speedmatters.org. Its features include a
speed test to determine your own internet connection speed and a
state-by-state report on average speeds nationwide.
CWA Mourns Retired District 13 Assistant
Frank Wentzel
Frank S. Wentzel, retired assistant to two District 13 vice
presidents, who helped facilitate the merger of the independent
Federation of Telephone Workers of Pennsylvania into CWA, died
March 6 at age 84.
"Frank was one of the kindest, most trustworthy people I ever
knew," said retired District 13 Vice President Vincent Maisano.
"You could always rely on him. He had a wealth of knowledge and
enjoyed sharing it."
Wentzel joined FTWP when he went to work for Bell Telephone
of Pennsylvania in 1947 as a station installer and PBX repairer.
He rose through the ranks of FTWP's Local 44 and eventually
became president of the federation's Pittsburgh Division. He
worked with Maisano – by then president of the
Philadelphia Division – and others to effect a merger of
the 14,000-member union with CWA in August 1984, forming the
union's District 13.
Following the merger, Wentzel became assistant to District 13
Vice President Bill Wallace and stayed on in that position under
Maisano when he was elected District 13 vice president at the
1986 convention. He retired Nov.1, 1988.
He is survived by his wife, Margaret, of Pittsburgh.
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