Verizon Tape Update!

Transcript: Executive Vice President Angel Feliciano Speaking;

“CWA District 1 / IBEW Local 2213 Regional and Local Bargaining Teams as well as the IBEW New England Committees met with the Company today. At the Regional table the Company gave us a proposal on Health Benefits. Verizon management had made it clear in their opening remarks on Wednesday that their goal in this round of bargaining was to erode our standard of living and the many hard fought for gains we have made through our more than sixty years of contract negotiations.

The Company proposed today to replace the MEP HCPPO and the HCN plan with two inferior plans and to vastly increase deductibles, out of pocket maximums and to add employee contributions. This proposal would also add considerable cost to retirees by implementing this plan. Retirees would begin paying annual contributions as well as paying more for their benefits with higher deductibles and higher out of pocket maximums.

The committee spent the day discussing these new plans with the company and will evaluate the plans over the weekend. The Company seems intent on making the plans so expensive that no one will be able to afford to use them.

We have told the company that we are prepared to work with them to help them cut cost with the Health Benefits but we are not prepared to shift the cost of those benefits to our members. We fought too hard for these plans, these benefits and our members and their employees deserve the best health care coverage from a company that is extremely profitable.

We have recessed for the weekend and will reconvene with the Regional Bargaining Committee on Tuesday. Most of the Local committees will be reconvening on Monday.

Thank you and please stay in touch with this tape.”

The Tape number is 212-633-6753, press 8 for Verizon.

Assembly Votes On Anti-Union Benefits Bill: “Dark Day For Workers’ Rights”

TRENTON  – The Communications Workers of America released today the following statement from President Larry Cohen, following the Assembly’s vote to deny bargaining rights to nearly half a million public workers:

 “This is a dark today for workers’ rights as the race to the bottom continues.  We thank those who stood up and voted “No” despite the pressure.  We will never forget them.

 “We will also never forget those who moved New Jersey back fifty years, stripping bargaining rights from public workers and imposing health care cuts that will destroy living standards for hundreds of thousands of families.”

Reginal Bargaining Report #2

Thursday June 23, 2011

Regional and Local Bargaining Teams met with the Company today. At the Regional table the Company gave a presentation about health care which lasted all day.

We have analyzed the Company’s lengthy opening statement from yesterday’s meeting which basically followed the theme of your wages are too high, your health benefits cost too much, you use your health benefits too frequently, you are out sick too much and your work rules are too costly.

If you read the Union’s opening statement you can see that we took the high road and offered to help the Company solve problems as long as the member’s livelihoods were not harmed.
Well it appears that Verizon believes that you are their enemy instead of the dedicated hard working work force that we know you are. This company is trying to take back everything that we have fought for and worked for over half a century.

We are not ready to go backwards; we are not ready to give up our standard of living. We all must stand together and if it’s a fight they want it’s a fight they’ll get.

The Union will be asking you to mobilize, to take action. We need every member involved. This fight cannot be left to someone else. Every member must participate.

Keep checking this website for further updates and instructions.

CWA Members Rally As Bargaining With Verizon Gets Underway

CWA Members Rally at Verizon Headquarters to kick off Bargaining. Click on photo to view the photo gallery.

Negotiations began Wednesday between the Communications Workers of America and Verizon Communications covering about 35,000 CWA telecommunications workers from Virginia to New England.

Bargaining is led by CWA District 1 Vice President Chris Shelton in the metro New York area and in Philadelphia by CWA Vice Presidents Ron Collins, District 2, and Ed Mooney, District 13. Key issues include quality jobs and health care.  The current contract expires at 12:01 a.m. on Aug. 7. 

The International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers also is bargaining with CWA for a new contract for Verizon members.

As talks got underway, CWA members were mobilizing and holding mass rallies across Verizon East territory.  

CWA 1101 held a Rally at Verizon Headquarters, located at 140 West Street.

We have added a Bargaining link on the home page; we will post bargaining updates and related news there.

Regional Bargaining Report #1

Wednesday June 22, 2011

CWA Districts 1, 2, and 13 as well as IBEW New York (NY), New England (NE) and New Jersey (NJ) opened negotiations with Verizon today. CWA District 1 and IBEW NY and NE are negotiating for new contracts at the Rye Town Hilton in Westchester County. CWA Districts 2, 13 as well as IBEW NJ are negotiating for new contracts in Philadelphia. Chris Shelton, Vice President District1 gave an opening statement to the Company at the regional Bargaining table in NY. Chris closed his statement by stating.

“We need to be able to grow with Verizon. The Company cannot keep claiming surplus after surplus while hiring more contractors every day. It is not fair to your employees to tell them there are too many of them but yet you need contractors to do their work. It is not even good business to do this. We know that Verizon has an ideology of union avoidance and that shrinking the Union workforce is a priority. When ideology flies in the face of good business sense sooner or later the business and the stockholders suffer.

Our members are not only loyal to the Union they are loyal to Verizon as well. They want to see Verizon succeed, they work hard every day and have for the last half century to see Verizon and its predecessors succeed. However, Verizon’s success should not be, cannot be, at their expense.

So we come here today to negotiate a contract that is fair to the Company, one that protects good Union jobs and that gives our membership the opportunity to grow along with the Company.”

The Regional Bargaining Committee also discussed logistics and a tentative schedule. Bargaining has adjourned for the day and is scheduled to resume tomorrow Thursday, June 23rd and it is expected that the Company will provide a benefit presentation to the Union. All Local Bargaining will also begin tomorrow.

Opening Statements From Verizon Bargaining

Verizon Bargaining
Opening Statement Vice President, CWA District One
June 22, 2011

The Unions are here today to start the process of negotiating a new Collective Bargaining Agreement.

Our Unions have negotiated contracts with Verizon, Bell Atlantic and their predecessors since before any of us started working here. During the last 50 years, we worked together to solve problems, to address one another’s needs at the bargaining table, to deliver quality service to customers and build a strong company.

And we have changed together as well. Our members have never stood in the way of technological change. Our union has always advocated efforts to insure that our members worked to stay abreast of the ever changing telecommunications industry.

Verizon CEO Ivan Seidenberg should know better than almost anyone that it was our members who did the work to make the profits which gave this Company the ability to grow and to expand into the businesses that it now includes. I say this because Ivan has the unique perspective for a CEO that he started out as one of us.

But in recent years, this company has turned its back on its employees. This company that we built together has taken its profits and headed off in new directions, to new products and technologies, and left behind the very workers that are responsible for its success.

Since 2005 Verizon has cut 80,000 wireline jobs from its rolls through access line sales, segment spin-offs, layoffs, attrition and retirements. In the same time period, Verizon Wireless has added 23,000 jobs.

Prior to the merger of Bell Atlantic and GTE in 2000, CWA and the IBEW represented 69% of Bell Atlantic employees. After the merger, 53% of the new Verizon Company was union-represented employees. Now we have dropped to only 35%.

We know that the industry is changing in a fundamental way and that the consumer side of the wireline business is in decline. While wireless subscribers continue to grow in number.

But we also know, in spite of what we hear from Mr. Seidenberg and the commercials for Verizon Wireless, that wireless service is not limitless. And without a quality wired network, there can be no reliable wireless phone service, no wireless data network, and no limitless world of communications.

We need to be able to grow with Verizon. The Company cannot keep claiming surplus after surplus while hiring more contractors every day. It is not fair to your employees to tell them there are too many of them but yet you need contractors to do their work. It is not even good business to do this. We know that Verizon has an ideology of union avoidance and that shrinking the Union workforce is a priority. When ideology flies in the face of good business sense sooner or later the business and the stockholders suffer.

Our members are not only loyal to the Union they are loyal to Verizon as well. They want to see Verizon succeed, they work hard every day and have for the last half century to see Verizon and its predecessors succeed. However, Verizon’s success should not be, cannot be, at their expense.

So we come here today to negotiate a contract that is fair to the Company, one that protects good Union jobs and that gives our membership the opportunity to grow along with the Company. Both the Company and the Union have an opportunity here to change the dynamic. An adversarial stance serves neither the members of our Union or Verizon and its shareholders. We must come to an agreement that is fair to both sides.

Company’s Opening Statement

Unions Reach Tentative Agreement with GE

IUE-CWA and the United Electrical Workers Union have reached tentative national agreements with General Electric after four weeks of intense negotiations. The four-year tentative package provides for gains in wages, pension and job and income security. The settlement will be voted on by the union negotiating committees then submitted for membership ratification.   More details to come as available.

New Jersey Public Workers Protest Sell-Out By State Legislators

About 10,000 CWAers and union activists from New Jersey filled the streets Thursday outside the state capitol in Trenton to protest a deal between Gov. Chris Christie and some legislators that would take away the right of public workers to bargain over health care and pensions.

Inside the Capitol, union members packed a meeting of the Senate budget committee, testifying against the deal and criticizing politicians for selling out working families. CWA District 1 Legislative/Political Director Bob Master testified for CWA.

About 25 union leaders were arrested, including CWA local presidents Adam Liebtag, Local 1036; Ken McNamara, Local 1037; Paul Alexander, Local 1038; and New Jersey state AFL-CIO President Charles Wowkanech and Secretary-Treasurer Laurel Brennan.

Outside the hearing, CWA District 1 Vice President Chris Shelton blasted the governor and leading legislators for turning on working families. “Stripping hundreds of thousands of workers of their basic right to collective bargaining is a fundamental betrayal of the middle class,” he said. “Trenton’s anti-union bill has awoken the passions of hundreds of thousands of union members across New Jersey and across the country. They are right to be angry and they are right to speak out.”

On CWA’s stewards’ call last night, Carolyn Wade, president of CWA Local 1040 and a CWA Executive Board at-large member, said the contract covering 40,000 state workers is up in less than two weeks and there has been no real bargaining.

“These legislators are hearing from CWA members and public workers across the state and they’ll hear us again in November if they vote to take away our collective bargaining rights.”

The deal eliminates collective bargaining over health care, requires workers to pay 30 percent of their health care costs and make additional pension contributions. It will be considered by the New Jersey Senate and the Assembly budget committee next week. More demonstrations are planned as legislators meet.

Membership Meeting Bargaining Report

 BARGAINING REPORT

1101 Exec. VP Angel Feliciano and VP Joe Manley (right)

By Executive VP Angel Feliciano 

At the outset, I want to emphasize that, as we have done for the last 10 contracts, it was our intent to hold a Membership Meeting at the end of the month after we had met with the company and had a list of their demands to go over with you. However, because of a petition we received, we had to move that up to today, the first day that a suitable location was available. So although we will have a full report for you, it will not include the company’s demands since we will not meet with them until the 22nd, a little over a week from now.

On a side note, it was our intent to use the High School of Fashion Industries, which has the same seating capacity as this hall, but that was not available until the end of this month. Unfortunately, that takes us from a cost of $600.00 for the night to $20,000.00 for tonight! 

General Membership Meeting 7-14-2011

Now, as you know, bargaining is not a single dimensional process. It’s not just a union team sitting across from a company team trying to hash out a contract. There are many other factors that come into play and in my report I will cover most of those factors.

As you know, labor and unionized workers are under attack throughout the country resulting in a difficult atmosphere for bargaining. We stand today at the brink of an all out war. Those that initiated this war chose to forget labor’s great accomplishments such as public education, the 8 hour work day, child labor laws, social security, Medicare, health and safety on the job.

In areas such as health care, we have faced many struggles and made many sacrifices. In fact, when we first proposed it to AT&T and New York Telephone, they refused outright, saying that they would never agree to socialized medicine. Does that sound familiar?

Although the faces have changed the buzz words remain the same.

Today, we have built the best health care package in this or any other industry. It’s no wonder that as congress seeks to tax the so-called ‘Cadillac plans’, they use OUR plan as an example!

The Supreme Court recently ruled that corporations are no longer limited in what they spend to influence politics and politicians, while unions are still severely restricted. As a result, the Republican right wing and many anti-union forces have unlimited resources to press their attacks!

  • Ohio is seeking to stop union dues;
  • Utah is seeking to do away with seniority, and allowing the administrators to institute merit pay;
  • Wyoming, where the first public union came into being in 1932, workers have been stripped of their collective bargaining rights;
  • Sacramento, California wants to strip workers of the right to bargain on pensions;
  • Missouri is trying to become a right-to-work state;
  • Maine has been considering right-to-work laws;
  • Michigan’s pensions, seniority, bargaining rights, and arbitration rights are under attack.  In fact, in Pontiac, Michigan, an administrator simply voided an entire contract; and
  • As close to home as New Jersey, a battle is being waged to take away the right to bargain on health care!

While unions are under attack for being greedy and demanding too much, we don’t hear a word about executive compensation. In 1965 CEO’s were making 24 times what their workers made. By 2005 it was up to 262 times and is even higher today…yet we’re greedy!

Ivan Seidenberg made $24.31 million last year alone, his five year total is $70.28 million…
NOW THAT’S GREED!

What this means at bargaining is simple; these boards of directors are all inter-locked. They all sit at the business roundtable and encourage and offer to support each other in their battles. Can you imagine Seidenberg going to the roundtable and saying he’s broke us? He would be a hero!

While business has the money, we have the one thing they shouldn’t be able to buy – the people, and that’s where mobilization comes in.

In Mobilization, we have initiated a robust and highly focused campaign. To date, we have trained over 400 Local 1101 members, stewards and chief stewards in a CWA unified campaign. Some may argue that we have not given enough notice or time, but that IS the purpose of mobilization, to get our people mobilized and into activities in as short an amount of time as possible.  If an issue arises, we must be prepared to react quickly and effectively!

Some of you may recall that, six years ago we had an issue with the company on movement of work out of state. When we raised the issue, the company took the position that it could not be a serious issue because we didn’t have a lot of grievances on the issue. A call went out from the bargaining team and the next day our stewards had filed over 1,000 grievances – suddenly the company wanted to talk!

The next contract, we faced a company determined to break our medical benefits. We called our mobilizers and asked that practice picked lines be set up around the Local. By the next morning, we had picket lines in front of EVERY location – suddenly the company wanted to talk!

And, of course, who can forget the Flying Circus, which hit and run all over the city. That is a language Verizon understands.

This time around, we have proposed many activities:

  • We have proposed picketing sites outside contractors who are doing our work;
  • We have planned for “Leave your Brain at Home Days”;
  • We have proposed targeted slow-downs;
  • We have proposed picketing both the contractors and Verizon Wireless stores; and
  • We have proposed public outreach programs.

This will not be easy, we know that. We are going to ask members to give up some time when they are not on the company clock, such as vacation days, ewd days, n-days.

Company – As far as this set of negotiations is concerned, we have not yet met formally.  We are scheduled for our first sessions starting next week, on the 22nd. But we clearly know some of their agenda.

In informal discussions, the chairperson has told our chairperson that we will “BE SHOCKED” at their proposals. They say they can’t compete with our current contract.  We have heard rumors that the company has made contingency plans for a lockout if we try to stop the clock at midnight and try to work without a contract – they are prepared to lock us out!  Their reason is that they do not want to deal with mobilization activities, which could cripple them after the deadline.

We also hear rumors that they’ve made contingency plans to hire replacement workers and replace strikers.  In the past, that would have been unheard of – but that was when we were 80,000 strong in New York. Today we have 16,500 unionized workers in Verizon in New York – it is not so far-fetched. The plus side of that is that if they hire replacement workers, unemployment benefits kick-in right away, but that is clearly not a saving grace!

We have also heard that they are prepared to impose a contract.  For those of you not familiar, when you reach a point where you can no longer bargain, the company has a legal right to impose their last best offer. That is why we can never just reject their proposals out of hand and why we must always have information requests pending.

And what do they want at the bargaining table? We have more than a clear indication.

They want:

  • The Job Security Language – they say they can’t live with that language, which is too restrictive for them. Can you imagine where we would be today without that language.  At least half the people in this hall would be gone!
  • Medical – after numerous fights, after building the best package in the country, they say they can’t afford it. This from a corporation that is making $1.44 billion.  We’ve already paid for our benefits through the years. We have made it clear to them that we are prepared to discuss ways to cut costs, but not by shifting the costs to workers!
  • ACP – The Company claims that even the modified ACP is not helping with their absence problem – they now want to control absence by striking at the pocket book.  They want to limit what they pay for and for how long. This would strike at our sickest people just when they need it the most.

At the Local table they are looking for major concessions – including:

  • Article 8, seniority on transfers. They say that those rules are too archaic and tie their hands too much. Well guess what, they are designed to tie their hands! We who have been around for any length of time know the abuses that led to this language. Those of us who were here in the late 80’s remember them transferring all our effective stewards after the ’86 and ’89 strikes. Thank god for that language, because they could only transfer them temporarily.
  • DTA – they don’t want to pay for inconveniencing us with their transfers because they can’t manage the business.
  • Work Schedules – again, they are looking for flexibility so they can schedule us whenever and wherever they want.
  •  Work Rules – another flexibility issue. Well, they don’t need more flexibility, they need less!

Before we go into the next item, which is new business, I just want to say that we have our political differences in this hall. That is and will be evident. But let us all remember that for the next 6 weeks at least; we all have ONE COMMON ENEMY – VERIZON!  Regardless of debate, regardless of our differences, when we leave this room tonight we must do as we have always done  –  we will be UNITED to face the struggles ahead, because the company must know that 1101 is ONE!