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SEPTA strike grinds into Day 2

As hundreds of thousands of commuters and schoolchildren braced for a second day without public transit, Gov. Rendell and Mayor Nutter chastised union leaders for calling the surprise predawn strike.

With SEPTA buses, subways and trolleys idled, thousands of extra riders Tuesday crammed onto Regional Rail trains, forcing widespread delays, especially during the evening rush hour. Many others took to their cars, snarling traffic throughout the region.

Negotiations could resume tomorrow between SEPTA and striking Transport Workers Union Local 234, which represents about 5,100 SEPTA vehicle operators and mechanics. The workers went on strike at 3 a.m. Monday.

"It was an ambush of the citizens and the riding public," said Nutter. "No one saw this coming. Everyone was caught off guard here."

Nutter and Rendell, who had prevailed on the TWU not to strike during the World Series games in Philadelphia, criticized union leaders for turning down what the governor called a "sensational" contract in tough economic times.

"If the workers were presented with that deal yesterday, I have no doubt it would have been accepted," Nutter said. "No one, no one, no one has that kind of deal sitting in front of them right now. It's insane."

TWU Local 234 President Willie Brown said the major reasons for the strike were increased pension contributions from workers, job "picking" rights, and the length of the contract. He said the union wanted 3 percent wage increases for each year of a four-year contract.

"I understand I'm the most hated man in Philadelphia right now," Brown said. "I have no problem with that."

Rendell said the five-year contract spurned by TWU leaders called for a $1,250 signing bonus upon ratification, a 2.5 percent raise the second year, and a 3 percent raise in each of the next three years.

It also called for an increase in pension payments to workers and no increase in their health-insurance contributions.

Rendell said he had agreed to give SEPTA $6 million from an economic development fund in the Pennsylvania Department of Transportation to help pay for the contract sweeteners.

"The union leadership walked on a victory last night," Rendell said Tuesday. "They just didn't know when to declare victory."

Brown said he had gone against his union's best interests by acquiescing on Friday to the request of Rendell and Nutter not to strike during the World Series.

"The smart thing to do would have been to say, 'We're going out,' " Brown said. "My workers wanted me to go. But I didn't. I'm a Philadelphian, too."

Once the threat of a strike during the World Series evaporated, Brown said, Rendell and Nutter grew increasingly inflexible.

"They were kicking us around like we were the prime cans of the world."

Brown said Nutter's biggest concern was that the SEPTA contract would set a pattern for city workers, including police and firefighters. Brown argued that SEPTA was in better financial condition than the city and could afford a more generous settlement.

Nutter said "the parameters kept changing. It's difficult to negotiate when you don't know what the key points are and who's making the decisions."

No talks were held Tuesday, as hundreds of thousands of work-a-day riders scrambled to find alternate ways to and from work and school.

Rendell, Nutter and U.S. Rep. Robert Brady (D., Pa.) were involved in the talks until they broke off early Tuesday. Rendell, who said he had slept little for the last three nights and missed Game 5 of the World Series because of the negotiations, said he was willing to continue to work with both sides.

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Comments   
Posted 08:04 PM, 11/03/2009
Mark Chalupa
Mayor Nutter ambushed? That was hard to do. He was to busy reading a report, and trying to get another study done for the BRT, so he can delay more action.
Posted 08:15 PM, 11/03/2009
Gilliam
I hate this country. Ride a bike and ignore these lunatics.
Posted 08:24 PM, 11/03/2009
There He Is
I am a polite, courteous, paying customer of SEPTA. Now that is is obvious that the union goons don't care about me, maybe I'll start leaving my trash all over the already filthy vehicles or doing anything I can to make their jobs harder. My commute home tonight was an hour longer than usual. It's payback time.
Posted 08:30 PM, 11/03/2009
jowillia1
FIRE THEM ALL!
Posted 08:30 PM, 11/03/2009
There He Is
You're not greedy? The hell you're not. Why shoudl you have to work under stressful conditions and "not get paid for it?" Newsflash: It's your JOB, and you DO get paid for it (and quite well, I might add). So STOP
Posted 08:30 PM, 11/03/2009
There He Is
You're not greedy? The hell you're not. Why shoudl you have to work under stressful conditions and "not get paid for it?" Newsflash: It's your JOB, and you DO get paid for it (and quite well, I might add). So STOP
Posted 08:31 PM, 11/03/2009
history
SEPTA's union should be embarassed by what they did. They are certainly entitled to strike, however, deciding to walk off the job at 3:00am is a disgrace. Assuming that parents and students watch the news before school is ignorant. Have you tried to watch the news lately? If not for the Phillies all the news would be caustic and depressing. Nobody wants to start their day that way. Do you know how many kids were waiting for buses that never came? I will exercise every option before utuilizing SEPTA in the near future, cab, amtrak, bicycle, skateboard, are all more appealing at this point.
Posted 08:31 PM, 11/03/2009
Liberty1776
I say do a "Ronald Reagan" to them. (Air Traffic Controllers Strike) Fire them! Run full page ad's in the major newspapers "SETPA is hiring." $ 52,0000 a year. $10 dollar per pay health insurance. $1,200.00 sign on bonus. Matching 401k No education required No need to be polite to our customers.
Posted 08:37 PM, 11/03/2009
asdfjkl1234567890
Willie Brown, Leroy Brown, whatever your name is, you're a f---ing fool! If I see you picketing, I'm flipping you the bird or throwing mustard at you or something. I don't care whether or not you or any of your lazy good-for-nothing workers or their families live or die. You all deserve to be unemployed, preferably long enough to exhaust unemployment as well.
Posted 08:45 PM, 11/03/2009
bc7
Ride a bike? Many of us commute 10 miles or more with equipment for work. I would love to ride a bike to work, but its not realistic to think everyone can do that.
Comment removed.
Posted 08:49 PM, 11/03/2009
Rantanplan
Just raise the taxes a little bit more so you can give pay raises and free health insurance to all the lazy public workers of the city.
Posted 08:56 PM, 11/03/2009
Patrizia007
Septa has been mismanaged for years, wasting thousand and thousands of taxpayer bailout dollars. Don't they get it? The people are fed up and don't care anymore about them. Start a clean sweep, including all of the deadbeat and overpaid management, get rid of the dime-a-dozen overpaid loafers, and hire people who really want to work for decent wages. The waste of money by Septa through the years is sickening with their misuse of federal, state, and city monies. Rendell will bail them out again.
Posted 09:00 PM, 11/03/2009
mikeyg
Striking was for the fifties, sixties and seventies to get proper representation, benefits and training programs. Today, it is simply for greed. The lady who keeps posting on here says we do not know that they make Septa workers stay on their job past their scheduled end time. So what. You show me someone leaving work exactly at their end time today and I'll show you someone headed for the unemployment line. What does an 11% salary increase have to do with being kept after work. They already get overtime pay. Try a salaried job where you have to put in an extra 10 hours a week for no pay. Stop the whining. 1% healthcare is disgusting, even the people who work for Blue Cross pay higher than that.
Posted 09:01 PM, 11/03/2009
Tristamust
Patrizia007 is right! Fire them all! Start all over. Hell, it's a recession. It'll be virtually impossible NOT to find good workers.
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