Web Search powered by YAHOO! SEARCH  

Front Page   

share
email
print
reprint
font size
options
 
SEPTA cashiers Donald Dennison (right), 55, and Joseph Coulter, 54,picket at the Fern Rock Transportation Center in North Philadelphia.
AKIRA SUWA / Staff Photographer
SEPTA cashiers Donald Dennison (right), 55, and Joseph Coulter, 54,picket at the Fern Rock Transportation Center in North Philadelphia.
READER FEEDBACK
Post a comment


Strike ends; SEPTA, union sign deal

The strike by SEPTA workers that had paralyzed much of the region since last week ended this morning with a signing of an agreement by SEPTA officials and leaders of Transport Workers Union Local 234.

Buses, subways, and trolleys, idled since 3 a.m. Tuesday, should be running in time for this mornning's rush.

The end to the six-day walkout came in dramatic fashion, as union leaders joined SEPTA officials about 12:45 this morning at a news conference outside the Center City office of Gov. Rendell, who brokered the deal a day after he said he was giving up on efforts to settle the strike.

Attending the news conference were U.S. Rep. Bob Brady, who has mediated SEPTA strikes in the past, Mayor Nutter and Local 234 president Willie Brown.

Brady said he never stopped talking to the union, which over the weekend backed off from an agreement reached late Friday.

"Negotiations never broke off. We never stopped talking," Brady said. "Some numbers had to be massaged. . . . Everybody cooperated."

Rendell, who had blamed union leaders for the collapse of Friday's tentative agreement, had only praise for Brown this morning. "Willie Brown did his job well for his members," he said. "That's the nature of the collective-bargaining process." Nutter said the most important thing was that "the system will be up and running" this morning.

Brown, who nodded in agreement, said a ratification vote would be held in a week and a half.

After the collapse of Friday's agreement, Rendell had threatened to withdraw nearly $7 million in state funds to pay for bonuses of $1,250 per worker. By signing the pact, the TWU, which represents 5,100 drivers, operators and mechanics, preserved the bonuses.

The five-year contract also calls for a 2.5 percent raise in the second year, and a 3 percent raise in each of the final three years. It increases workers' contributions to the pension fund from the current 2 percent to 3 percent, and increases the maximum pension to $30,000 a year from the current $27,000 a year.

The strike ended much as it started: in the middle of the night, with many in the city unaware of what would await them in the morning.

Earlier yesterday, officials on both sides had made it clear that no new talks had been scheduled and that this morning's commute would be much like last week's: with the nearly one million riders who use SEPTA's City and Frontier Division buses and trolleys and the Broad Street Line and Market-Frankford El every weekday having to find alternatives.

The strike's impact was minimal yesterday, with people taking advantage of balmy weather to walk to their destinations. Some churches set up car pools to get members to services.

Otherwise, the city seemed to take a breather from the angst. Not even a planned demonstration against Local 234 outside SEPTA headquarters on Market Street came off.

The strike appeared to have been settled late Friday, when Rendell and Brady announced a tentative agreement with the union.

On Saturday, however, Local 234 leadership rejected a contract offer that the governor and the mayor considered generous, given the current economic climate.

Rendell and Nutter were angered that the union and SEPTA had reached what the governor called a handshake agreement - and the union balked.

Yesterday afternoon, union spokesman Jamie Horwitz said: "The governor was correct. There was essentially a handshake agreement on some of the big issues related to salary and pension funding. "But the devil is in the details. And when the contract was sent over [Saturday], it included a couple things that were difficult for the union," Horwitz said.

Yesterday at Zion Baptist Church at Broad and Venango Streets in North Philadelphia, congregants streamed in for the 10:45 a.m. service.

Cars pulled up outside to drop off the elderly and infirm, and the no-parking zone along Broad Street was filling up.

Pastor Gus Roman said attendance at church activities all week, as well as at the earlier service yesterday morning, had been down, although he wasn't sure by how much.

But he was concerned about much more than attendance.

"It's the community health and welfare," he said.

"All during the week, you look at Erie and Broad, which is a hub for a lot of traffic . . . and you see the barrenness of it," he said. "It's frightening to see that. And the impact of that on business."

People couldn't get to hospitals or services they needed during the strike, he said.

"One of the things this is teaching us is that we're going to have to look at the impact of SEPTA on the church and on these institutions," he said.

He said he had concluded that the city's religious community should be involved.

"It's an eye-opener," he said. "It's in our mission statement that we are a service organization. But not until now did we give any thought to the role that the church should play" at the bargaining table.

"The way it is now, we're just bystanders, just looking," Roman said. "We need to mount an effort - churches - to do what we need to to, and that is to be a voice to the negotiations."

On Market Street, a bellhop at the Loews Philadelphia Hotel said pedestrian traffic was about the same as usual. Most hotel guests, he said, tend to take taxis instead of public transportation.

A few doors west, a protest against the union had been planned for 1 p.m. But by then, the only person other than SEPTA security officers and members of the media was Tili Ayala, who hadn't known about the demonstration and simply went on her own from Frankford, "as a Mormon activist."

She held a sign that read, "Talk is cheap. Get service back on street!!"


Contact staff writer Sandy Bauers at 215-854-5147 or sbauers@phillynews.com.

Comments   
Posted 05:57 AM, 11/09/2009
EVA9601
The workers deserve everything they bargained for in their contract. Willie Brown did a great job of representing them. Collective bargaining IS alive and well in America. Now get back to work and school.
Posted 06:47 AM, 11/09/2009
katezaidan
go, SEPTA workers, go! The strike was somewhat painful, but I'm happy to know the drivers are getting a fair contract.
Posted 06:49 AM, 11/09/2009
Kitty_Carlyle
You all were out since last Tuesday. How many days are your paychecks going to be short? You get back to work and hope you can pull OT to make up the difference.
Posted 07:03 AM, 11/09/2009
minonda
@EV9601 - glad to see you think that millions of people should undergo hardship so that the SEPTA workers will have a comfortable life. My daughter told me yesterday that when they go to a hospital or docotor, BEFORE THIS CONTRACT, they had NO CO-PAY, unlike the underlings who they ferry from place to place. So HAPPY that their luxurious lives can continue uninterrupted. In fact, why don't we take up a collection from the people in North and West Philadelphia, as well as those in the rest of PHiladelphia, and the suburban commuters, whose lives were disrupted by Willie BRown's strike, to pay the missed salaries of the abused and unfortunate SEPTA strikers? It seems only fair that the hostages should pay their captors for the pain they have suffered. I was pro-union before this strike, but now I see just how arrogant the union leaders are and finally understand the objections of all those who are anti-union.
Posted 07:10 AM, 11/09/2009
minonda
@EVA9601 - How DARE you say "Now get back to work or school." Who gave workers the right to deprive people of going about their daily business? You mention school: that means CHILDREN, who have zero involvement with this disagreement. That line should have read, "Now get back to work, school, or life-saving medical treatments which Willie Brown has chosen to prevent you from getting." Please. You are an example of why so many people are anti-union. You're getting what you want, so to hell with everybody else and their kids.
Posted 07:17 AM, 11/09/2009
Cat
Willie Brown is a clown who held the region's workers hostage to TWU's selfish and unreasonable demands for unskilled labor.
Posted 07:27 AM, 11/09/2009
Cat
Dear TWU, Congrats, your selfish actions will continue to kill unions. Enjoy your Viagras.
Posted 07:42 AM, 11/09/2009
concerns25
The City owns the Broad Street line and the El, going forward these 2 should be under a separate union so the City cannot be held hostage. Either bring in another transit company to run these or a separate union under separate contracts expiring at separate times. This way only the bus and trolley would be held up and at another time the Broad and El would be held.
Posted 07:57 AM, 11/09/2009
minonda
I have written to Arlen Spector to ask that legislatin be introduced that will prevent unions from harming the public as they seek resolution to their employment issues. If the rest of us can work without union representation, why do these people have the right to it? Nothing is protecting me from getting increased health care costs, or not getting a salary increase next year (both of which are happening to me) or from losing my job, since my company is cutting 20% of its workforce. What makes these people so special? I don't get the same benefits that my boss gets. What if my company stopped making the drugs that it makes, that maybe some union worker or their family member needed to survive? How would they like that? No one should be allowed to have that kind of control over another person's life.
Posted 08:30 AM, 11/09/2009
babygirl53
Being a union employee, I applauded Willie Brown, he fought for his workers and stood his grounds. Maybe the City Union leaders need to take a page from his book. He did not sell his workers out. The way they put their lives in jeopardy everyday, they deserved a decent contract. Thank God for Bob Brady, that is why I voted for him for Mayor. He demands respects and people show him respect that is why he is a leader. To Rendell, Bob Brady, and Willie Brown, thank you for your tiredless effort to end this strike, so the people can go on with their lives.
Posted 08:31 AM, 11/09/2009
center city
minonda....you should find a union job....and you would get protection....Get a septa job and you will get that raise of 20% you have been missing out on.
Posted 09:33 AM, 11/09/2009
minonda
@center city - I don't want to work for a terroristic organization that takes hostages to get what it wants. I have good benefits, a decent wage, and intelligent people to work with. I am not led by an ape wearing a suit who considers his people to be more important than the rest of the citizens in the city and the surrounding suburban area. TWU Local 234 alread has more than most workers, so they have no business punishing the rest of us to get more, especially in these times. I was pro-union, but now I am firmly ANTI-UNION, because they are terrorists.
Posted 09:36 AM, 11/09/2009
minonda
All you union people who are feeling so smugh right now should be ashamed. You are enjoying a victory in the face of the suffering of many people who are either unemployed or feeling the effects of the harsh economy, and all you can say is that they should all join a union. This just proves that basically human beings are purely selfish. To hell with everyone else, just give me what I want.
Posted 10:10 AM, 11/09/2009
lefty
NEWSFLASH>>> Rendell praises Brown! Fast Eddie agree to have Willie Brown transfer some of his blubber to Fast Eddie's newer slimmer body in place of having SEPTA's books forensically audited!
Posted 10:12 AM, 11/09/2009
sewell guy
moronda,it disn't take long for the racism to come out did it("I am not led by an ape wearing a suit").You have have shown what you REALLY are..a bigot.Now STFU and crawl back in your hole.Lowlife.
  • Top Jobs
  • Top Homes
  • Top Cars
 
SEARCH JOBS
Center City


$399,899
1111 WALNUT ST #3
Phoenixville


$373,975
199 Sloan Road
SEARCH CARS

Buy Inquirer, Daily News & Philly merchandise here including:

 
Books
 
Movies
 
Page Reprints
 
Photo Licensing
 
Photos