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SEPTA progress as Rendell, Brady, Nutter enter talks

A wise veteran of contract talks between SEPTA and the Transport Workers Union Local 234 once said that nothing happens until Gov. Rendell, U.S. Rep. Bob Brady and Mayor Nutter step in.

Well, all three jumped into negotiations over the weekend, and the pace quickened considerably.

Union leaders reluctantly agreed to drop the threat to strike in the middle of the World Series. Representatives of both sides said that they had solved the health-insurance issue, and they were close on wages .

TWU president Willie Brown said that members would not pay more for health insurance, and that he expected a contract soon, after working without one for nearly eight months.

Today, negotiations will reconvene in Rendell's regional office on the 11th floor at The Bellevue, on Broad Street at Walnut. Contract talks, expected to begin at 6 last night, were postponed.

"Everyone will start fresh in the morning," said SEPTA spokesman Richard Maloney. "Everyone was tired after a long, long week."

Rendell, Nutter and Brady directly engaged in negotiations, talking to both sides over the weekend, said spokesmen for SEPTA and the union.

Rendell ordered negotiators for the transit agency and union to bargain at his office on Saturday about 1:30 p.m. after they had stayed up until 3 a.m. that morning, said Maloney.

The governor said that he warned both sides to stay at the bargaining table or risk "significant consequences" of losing state support for mass transit.

Before heading to Game 3 of the Series on Saturday, Rendell personally "went back and forth between the two sides on specific issues of the bargaining," said Maloney. "And then he came back from the game."

Saturday's bargaining session broke up at 10:30 p.m., after nine hours of talks, according to both sides.

Neither the governor nor Nutter talked of increasing the city and state contributions to SEPTA, said Maloney.

"The pot is what it is; we have a certain amount of money for those three issues, and it's a matter of priority of how much goes where," he said, referring to wages, health insurance and pensions.

Both Nutter and Rendell were concerned about a strike during the World Series while Philadelphia was at the center of the nation's attention.

Rendell said that a strike would have given the city "a little bit of a black eye."

Brown said that as long as Rendell was involved in talks, the union would continue bargaining and not have a work stoppage, said a TWU spokesman.

The TWU is negotiating on behalf of its 5,500 members after three contracts expired in the spring, including the City Division on March 15, Victory District on April 2 and Frontier District on April 7.

 

Comments   
Posted 04:58 AM, 11/02/2009
FJG JR
This Septa stuff, brought the Phillies bad luck.
Posted 07:04 AM, 11/02/2009
blackknight
What a joke. The Three Stooges try to help the evil empire. I feel much better that Ed "Comcast, Tobacco and Rainy Day Fund Stealing" Rendell is involved. I am even more comfortable that Nutter, is lending a hand when his city is corrupt, broke, and decaying around him.
Comment removed.
Posted 08:33 AM, 11/02/2009
johnny o
Bob Brady. Ed Rendell. No integrity. Not an ounce of moral fiber between them. They'll find a way to give that Local 234 everything asked for, and more. For this is how, as I try to explain to my wife, they become elected. The union vote (morons), and the American African vote (dummies).
Posted 08:47 AM, 11/02/2009
phillytwo
Does the new contract mandate that cashiers sell tokens and make change? or just sit there and say they don't make change or sell tokens and you should use a broken machine?
Posted 08:49 AM, 11/02/2009
CleanupPhilly
The Transit Workers' Union jinxed the Phillies by smelling $$.
Posted 08:50 AM, 11/02/2009
spider9
I like how "both sides said that they had solved the health-insurance issue". The solution is that the union doesn't pay anymore than they currently are paying. That's some good negotiating by SEPTA. Are we now expected to hear both sides have solved the wage issue by giving the union their requested 4% per year increase?
Posted 09:02 AM, 11/02/2009
CleanupPhilly
We need to do a Reagan with the Air Traffic Controllers Union here in Philly with each union. More contributions to the health plan are a must, or Septa has no choice but to start at will terminations. I guess the unions would rather have layoffs than a greater contribution as a group.
Posted 09:17 AM, 11/02/2009
iamsue
@phillytwo - Classic! There's a way to save money. Fire those people who sit in the subway stations and do nothing.
Posted 09:46 AM, 11/02/2009
Fraz
Johnny Zero = Bigot Scab go get back in your position as corporate america's B****h and take it like you have taken it you whole life
Posted 09:51 AM, 11/02/2009
btruth
Maybe Nutter will learn something about negotiating with unions. Obviously, his first go round he gave city unions a one year extension, with huge bonuses. Now he wants someone else to legislate pension changes so he doesn't have to do the tough negotiating. Maybe by watching others negotiate the Septa contracts he can gain yet another skill he obviously does not have.
Posted 10:42 AM, 11/02/2009
rikk48
Nutter needs to clean his own backyard with the city unions first
Posted 10:45 AM, 11/02/2009
rikk48
Nutter needs to clean his own backyard with the city unions first
Posted 01:37 PM, 11/02/2009
Ratiocinational
Fire them all. There are plenty of people willing and able to take their jobs. I'd rather be inconvenienced for a month or so while they train new workers than see these fools get another cent. Especially the cashiers.
Posted 03:06 PM, 11/02/2009
john 16
hey willie brown you are the union leader, ypu sold out your members by listening to rendell. You gave rendell all the aces you dope
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