PSC Public Hearing on State of Telecommunications in NYS

Wednesday, July 15 at 7pm. WE NEED TO BE THERE!  Last year CWA, together with consumer groups, petitioned the PSC to study the impact of deregulation on the telecommunications industry. We all know what the impact has been!  The PSC has finally called for public hearings throughout New York State on the state of the copper plant, customer service quality, and the FiOS build, We need to make sure the PSC hears the real story of what is happening.

CWA representatives will be testifying, and we need a strong member presence at the hearings. This is our job and our future. We all need to be there! Wear red.

Wednesday, July 15 at 7pm
NY Institute of Technology on Broadway
1871 Broadway, between 61 & 62 St
NY NY 10023

Click here to download the flier.

Regional Bargaining Report # 12, July 13, 2015, CWA District 1 NY/NE

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CWA District 1/IBEW Local 2213 and IBEW New England Regional Bargaining Committees reconvened today at the Rye Town Hilton in Rye, New York.  The Union worked on proposals, reviewed information provided by the Company and continues to wait for more information that has been previously requested.  There were no meetings with the Company today.

We are less are than 3 weeks from expiration and Verizon is hell-bent on destroying this Union and its members standards of living.  Locals and members need to continue their mobilization efforts.

Keep up the FIGHT for a fair and just contract!!

Every member is expected to attend the Rally on Saturday July 25, at 140 West Street.

CWA District 1 NY/NE Regional Bargaining Report #6, June 30, 2015

CWA District 1 NY/NE and IBEW NY/NE Regional and Local Bargaining Teams met with the Company today at the Rye Town Hilton in Rye, NY. The Regional Committee presented proposals to the Company including a proposal to eliminate all Contracting and to stop plans for future contracting.

The Company responded to some of the Unions requests for information and the Committee spent the rest of the day reviewing the information that was provided.

The Regional Committee is scheduled to meet with the Company tomorrow morning to receive information on the utilization on the medical plans.

We need to continue to stand strong and get our message out that we are more committed than we’ve ever been to fight to protect our wages, benefits and working conditions.

Mobilize! Mobilize! Mobilize!

Benefits Divide Threatens Labor Peace

The Wall Street Journal, By Vipal Monga and Kimberly S. Johnson,Tue, 30 Jun 2015
Many big companies are pushing to cut spending on employee benefits — from pensions to health insurance — and could face labor strikes as a result.

In all, major employers have about 400,000 union workers whose contracts are up for negotiation this year. They include the Detroit auto makers, whose workforces have a combined 140,000 members of the United Auto Workers; a group of railroad operators including CSX Corp., with 142,000 union employees; and telecom companies like Verizon Communications Inc., which is in talks with about 40,000 wireline workers.

Most labor talks involve some head-butting over benefits. But what’s different this time, corporate finance chiefs say, are a looming “Cadillac tax” on health-care plans and pension burdens that are dragging down profits.

At New York-based Verizon, executives want to “redesign and reshape” health plans in a bid to cut overall cost, said Fran Shammo, chief financial officer.

Verizon also aims to rein in pension expenses. Its obligations for defined-benefit pensions — the kind that guarantee retirees a set payout — totaled $25.3 billion at the end of 2014, up 10% from 2013.

The company began talks last week in Rye, N.Y., and Philadelphia with the Communications Workers of America and the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers. Neither union liked its opening offer, which included pension-plan changes, increases in employee health-care premiums, a 2% boost in wages this year and next, and a lump-sum payment of $1,000 per worker in 2017 in lieu of a raise.

“They’re going to be very difficult negotiations,” said Mr. Shammo.

Verizon said in a statement that its union health plans for a worker with one or more family members cost an average $20,000 a year, well above the $16,800 national average.

The unions say they made many concessions during the financial crisis, and with companies raking in record profits, don’t want to give up any more.

Quarterly earnings for S&P 500 companies almost tripled from the first quarter of 2009 and this year’s first quarter, making hardship a tougher sell.

“Workers have been told to toe the line, but corporate executives are not toeing the line,” said Candice Johnson, a CWA spokeswoman. The union points to the company’s top five executives, who receive $44 million in pay last year.

“As far as unions are concerned, the bad times are over,” said Gary Chaison, professor of industrial-relations at Clark University in Worcester, Mass. With the economy growing, they “will try to back out of concessions they made in the past,” he said.

But big employers are looking ahead to 2018, when a hefty excise tax kicks in on generous employee health-care plans. The tax is spurring them to consider moving workers to less costly plans, such as those with high deductibles. The tax, meant to help fund insurance for the previously uninsured under the Affordable Care Act, is 40% a year on the amount by which employer-sponsored plans exceed $10,200 for individual coverage and $27,500 for family coverage.

The Detroit auto makers say health costs already are growing unsustainably fast, and they will be looking for ways to keep them in check. The three companies say they will spend over $2 billion on medical coverage for hourly workers in 2015, or at least $14,800 per active worker.

Bob Allard, who fixes machines at General Motors Co.’s powertrain plant in Toledo, Ohio, says he will vote against any cuts in health-care benefits. Since 2009, he has paid a $25 co-payment for primary-care visits. Before that, he paid nothing.

“I’m not giving another penny back,” said Mr. Allard.

According to Kristin Dziczek, at the nonprofit Center for Automotive Research, Mr. Allard’s $28.79-an-hour pay rises to $55 an hour, if benefits are included.

Fredrik Eliasson, CFO of Jacksonville, Fla.-based CSX, said his company will be subject to the Cadillac tax and has implemented consumer-driven plans and co-pays for prescription drugs to try to “ratchet back” costs. About 85% of the company’s workforce is unionized.

The labor talks offer companies an opening to reduce pension burdens, which have ballooned since the financial crisis, leaving many plans underfunded and weighing on profits.

At the end of last year, GM had a $76.7 billion pension obligation for its U.S. workers, 35% more than the auto maker’s market capitalization of $55.3 billion.

GM pared its pension obligations by $28 billion in 2012 by offering white-collar retirees lump-sum payments and handing responsibility for their pensions to Prudential Financial Inc. through a group annuity contract. But GM, whose talks with the UAW are set to start July 13, needs the union’s nod to do the same for its hourly workforce.

“This bargaining is absolutely critical” to the car companies, an industry official said.

The UAW, which represents workers at GM, Ford Motor Co., and Fiat Chrysler Automobiles NV previously said it is prepared to strike as a last resort.

In the last round of talks, in 2011, the UAW agreed to move newly hired workers into defined-contribution plans like 401(k)s, making them responsible for investment decisions. Workers and retirees got no pension increases for the first time since 1950, when the auto makers instituted pensions.

Regional Bargaining Report #4, June 26, 2015

CWA District 1 and IBEW Regional Bargaining Committees met with the Company today at the Rye Town Hilton in Rye, NY. The Regional Committee continued making proposals to the Company to improve the working conditions and quality of life for our members. We are waiting for information and data that we have requested from the Company.

Regional bargaining will resume and Local bargaining will start on Monday, June 29, 2015 in Rye, N.Y.

We need to continue to stand strong and get our message out that we are more committed than we’ve ever been to fight to protect our wages, benefits and working conditions.

Regional Bargaining Report #3

The CWA District One and IBEW New York/New England Regional Bargaining Committee met with the company today in Westchester, NY. The first session of the day focused on the questions the committee had for the company on some of their proposals.

During the second session, the Union Committee made it very clear to the Company with a proposal on job security how important this issue is to the Union and the Members. We pointed out examples where the Company has declared surpluses as they continue with their plans to contract out work our Members perform.

We need to continue to be united and mobilize so the greedy executives at Verizon understand we will do whatever it takes to gain a fair and just contract.

Regional Bargaining Report #2, June 23, 2015

In response to Verizon’s opening day bargaining position, Vice President Dennis Trainor said claims about the pay increases they put on the bargaining table yesterday are simply a smokescreen designed to hide the harsh reality of their concessionary demands; deep cuts to pension benefits, skyrocketing increases in medical costs , and the complete elimination of job security.

Despite $9.6 billion in profits in 2014 and $44 million in compensation to their top five executives, Verizon wants to eliminate middle-class jobs and let customer service deteriorate. Their proposals would slash thousands of jobs and leave our remaining members with a diminished standard of living at the end of any new contract.”

There was no formal bargaining session today at the Regional table. The Union bargaining committee spent most of today reviewing the company’s proposal from yesterday’s session.

Local 1103 Tape -“We’re In For A Fight”

Tape–Friday, June 5, 2015 10:30 am this is President Kevin Sheil

You will be receiving a letter from the company in the next few days laying out its agenda for bargaining. The letter is not specific in so much as it doesn’t list any demands. Nonetheless, it is clear that they want you to believe that they have some major problems and you have to understand that the solutions must come at yours and your family’s expense. See, in a world where there are choices, the choice Verizon is telling you they are already making is that they will try and pressure you and extract as much as it can from you, in order to serve their lords on Wall Street. The letter is pure propaganda. There is no real business justification for their demand, only greed.

In this letter they are asking you to keep an “open mind” and to look at it from their perspective, that you are in a new reality, and you should expect and make do with the deterioration of working conditions and quality of life state you are presently in.

This letter is not a hokey we are in all this together letter, although that’s what they want you to believe, because with Verizon we are never in this together. It shouldn’t be that way, but that is the way they want it. There are two boats at Verizon. The yacht for those at the top and the raft for the rest of us. This letter is for you to temper your expectations, right now, because as they are telling you, you don’t deserve anything and they aren’t willing to give you anything. The letter is just another perverse divide and conquer tactic from the playbook that is corporate America.

As I said earlier, this is about choices. Verizon continues to choose NO.

Fios Buildout–NO
Days off on Saturday—NO
Days off in general–NO
Christmas Eve half day off—NO
Trust in their employees—NO
Respect for their employees—NO
Fair contract for employees—NO

Understand that what they are really telling you in the letter is that we are in for a fight. They are telling you that the healthcare benefits that your family relies on is costing this multi-billion dollar corporation too much money, so you have to pay more. They are telling you that they need flexibility because apparently the 35 miles that they can already transfer an employee permanently just isn’t enough, so you will have to move. (Don’t worry about it if you have to move from the home you love, your kids will adjust in a new school system.) They are telling you to be “open minded” yet behind the scenes they have notified the union of their intent to contract out all line work and TRG work, so apparently you need to be open minded enough to have no job. They are telling you that the regulatory environment has changed with the FCC ruling on net neutrality and this will now hamper their ability to build out Fios (Because we all remember the major Fios build out initiatives during the last five years when the regulatory environment was presumably in their favor).

There are two things you can do when you get the letter: Throw it away or read it. I urge you to read it. There is no better mobilization tool than management telling you exactly how they feel about you and your family, and your place in their plans.

This is CWA Local 1103.

Source : CWA LOCAL 1103

Local 1101 – VZ Contract Meeting – June 18th

Local 1101 Contract Meeting

Thursday, June 18 at 5:30pm, Fashion Institute of Technology, 227 W 27 St, NY NY (between 7th & 8th Ave). NOTE: This is the COLLEGE on 27 St, NOT the High School on 24 St.

As everyone knows, our contract with Verizon expires on August 1, 2015. The regional bargaining team has been holding union-side meetings to prepare for bargaining. Formal bargaining with Verizon begins on June 22 in Rye, New York.

Everything we have we’ve fought for. We’ve got to be prepared, stand together, and be ready to fight. Wear red every Thursday. Be in touch with your chief steward about on-going mobilization activities. Work safe and always do a quality job.

This is our job, our contract, our future.