Verison In Struggle With Striking Workers
D'AlmeidaInter
Press Service News Agency / News Analysis
Published: Friday 12 August 2011
As unemployed young rioters rage across London and frustrated homeless people in Holon burn tires on the streets of Israel, the great capitalist democracy across the Atlantic is also feeling repercussions from its own floundering economy.
On Monday, 45,000 workers represented by the Communications Workers of America (CWA) and the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers (IBEW) staged a coordinated walkout across a range of northeast and mid-Atlantic states, from Maine to Virginia.
The workers are disgruntled employees of Verizon Communications, which, according to its website, is "America's largest and most reliable wireless voice and 3G communication network".
However, the company's reliability was compromised at midnight on Saturday, Aug. 6, when CWA's contract with Verizon, covering 45,000 CWA and IBEW members, expired with no decision reached on the proposed one billion dollars in concessions.
Infuriated that the company is requesting 20,000 dollars in givebacks from every employee, Verizon workers are refusing to back down.
"We're fighting for our middle-class lives here," Michael Harris, president of CWA local 2336 in Washington, told IPS.
"If Verizon can afford to pay their executives a lot of money, they can maintain and treat us a little better. We work [extremely] hard for this company and we deserve [better] than this."
According to the records, Verizon's CEO Ivan Seidenberg took home 81 million dollars in total compensation over the last four years, including huge benefits for himself and his family, effectively pocketing a wage 300 times the pay of the average worker. Overall, Verizon's top five executives earned 258 million dollars in the last half decade.
Meanwhile, middle-income active and retired workers are being asked to give up thousands of dollars to help the company stay "afloat".
"They are trying to force active and retired workers to pay thousands of dollars for their medical care, eliminate benefits for injured workers, slash paid sick leave, eliminate all job security protections, and make it easier to send our work to overseas contractors in places like India and the Philippines," according to a CWA press release Tuesday.
Another demand on Verizon's negotiating table is replacing the current high-quality health care plan with a high-deductible plan requiring up to 6,800 dollars in additional costs borne by workers.
Verizon says that these cutbacks are necessary to keep the ailing company on its feet.
According to a letter penned by Verizon CEO Lowell McAdam on Sunday night and distributed to all U.S.-based wireline and corporate management, "It's no secret that the Wireline business has experienced a ten-year decline in our customer base and in profitability…we have arrived at the point where we must make additional hard decisions to address customer needs and the overall operating costs of the business."
"We're asking our union-represented employees to help us on a variety of issues that could streamline our processes and further reduce our Wireline cost structure while keeping their overall compensation and benefits among the best in corporate America," McAdam wrote, adding that unless a deal was struck soon the results would be "catastrophic".
However, Steve Early, author of "Civil Wars in U.S. Labor" reported this week, "Like General Electric, which just won givebacks from CWA and other unions, Verizon "isn't under any financial stress," according to The Wall Street Journal. The company reported 10.2 billion dollars in profits in 2010 and its net income for the first half of this year was 6.9 billion dollars."
The paper also noted that Verizon's wireline business, which includes home lines and business telephones, experienced revenue slumps of 2.9 percent in 2010 and 1.2 percent in the first six months of 2011 – losses which management is citing as the impetus to demand huge givebacks.
But the 70 striking workers from Verizon's wireless arm say this is simply an excuse. These employees, the only unionized workers at the wireless operation, insist that the company line of "plummeting profits" is merely a guise for an overall disregard for workers' collective bargaining power.
"Verizon can't tell us they're losing customers, they can't tell us they're not one of the most profitable companies in America," said Daniel Gutierrez, a CWA Local 1101 member helping to lead negotiations on the wireless agreement.
The Wall Street Journal reported that Verizon Wireless "boosted its subscriber rolls by 2.2 million in the second quarter, double that of rival AT&T Inc.".
"They want us to go to merit-based pay" rather than wage increases tied to seniority, said Gutierrez, 41, a technician and 16-year veteran of the company, saying that accepting the demand would effectively wipe out decades of hard-won gains by the unions.
"This Verizon work stoppage is the sixth strike in the last 28 years by some of the telephone workers involved," Early said. "They've been in the forefront of resisting healthcare cost shifting and other concession demands since private sector employers first went on the offensive after the air traffic controllers' strike was defeated in 1981."
This history includes strikes by the CWA and IBEW in 1983, 1986, 1989, 1998, 2000 and 2004. In the toughest of those struggles, 60,000 CWA and IBEW members struck for four full months to protest healthcare costs shifting at what was then NYNEX, the New York and New England company now known as Verizon.
Meanwhile, as the strike enters its fifth day, the company has hired thousands of non-unionised workers to break the picket lines. Strikers protesting outside Verizon outlets and headquarters across the country responded with chants of "Union busting – it's disgusting," while urging onlookers and allies to stand with the unions.
On Wednesday, Verizon filed for and was granted a court injunction after striking workers blocked the entrance to the company's Pittsburgh headquarters.
According to Verizon, "Some union picketers put up chains and locks across and exits of the parking lot of a Verizon facility…prohibiting the workers there from leaving in their cars. This act is a direct violation of a court injunction prohibiting illegal blocking of Verizon facilities and those responsible are subject to legal action on the part of law enforcement authorities."
For the workers, this strike is a matter of basic civil rights, and they do not appear to be backing down.
"We have the right to communicate with the public about Verizon's demands and we maintain that CWA members should be able to picket about this dispute," CWA representative Candice Johnson said in a statement Wednesday.
Several other veteran employees described this struggle – on which their health and the health of their families hinge – as a matter of "life and death".
(Join NationofChange today by making a generous tax-deductible contribution and take a stand against the status quo.)
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- groups:
- Community, News and Politics, Tech, Culture, 6 more
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remanns
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CLASS WAR NOW
- 10 months ago
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remanns
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remanns
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added to "Culture" -and some other more specialized groups.
Good post I think.
- 10 months ago
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remanns
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percipi224
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I am sick of workers being screwed. I put a note in the post box to show my support to my mail carrier. Verizon is just another corporate pirate. I use Sprint personally and I am not sure of their labor policys. We should all take the time to check labor policy of companies we are patrons of. I don't use Wal-mart for that reason.
- 10 months ago
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percipi224
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Buckeye_Bill
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percipi224:
I've got baaaad news for you...Verison OWNS Sprint.
- 10 months ago
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Buckeye_Bill
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percipi224
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Buckeye_Bill:
ARGH! pull hair out, run around house tearing at clothes!!! stopping myself from flushing phone (sanitation hates that sort of thing) And they talk about the monopolies in banking?
- 10 months ago
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percipi224
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Buckeye_Bill
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percipi224:
There was a divestiture of the Baby Bells in the mid 1980s, but with their lobbying and repurchase of those "broken up" parts, they are reanimating themselves into a "borg-like" entity again.
"You will be assimilated. Resistance is futile. Your base are belong to us."
Their motto.
LOL
- 10 months ago
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Buckeye_Bill
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northernexpat
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Just like all Corporations these day, they want to make a profit off the backs of the working man so Management can live high off the hog. The working class should call for a national strike day. Let these pigs find out that they cannot live without the workers. Also, I feel sorry for the replacement workers, they will get the blame, but are probably people that have been unemployed for so long they are desperate for any job. Don't let the Corporate Executives divide the country even more.
- 10 months ago
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northernexpat
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percipi224
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northernexpat:
that is the plan, always have a desparate workforce to call upon. and when they get savvy, create another crisis so you always have more starving wage slaves to call upon. I believe someone said recently that the rich want "wage parity" with China, that would mean we all earn $5,000 a year. I can't afford Verizon then.
- 10 months ago
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percipi224
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Wyley_Wombat
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Until I was faced with mandatory early retirement, I spent a total of 26 years and 10 months working for the Veri-big telephone company, starting when it was New Jersey Bell. I have worked as both craft and management and have been on both sides of the line. There has always been a vast difference, a factor of approximately 300, in compensation between the executives and the people actually do all of the work. And what do they actually do? I have never seen them do any more than give speeches and pose for photo ops. For this they deserve millions? I think not. Make no mistake, the main goal of the company is to get rid of the unions and they will give money to any politician that will help them attain this goal. All the company really cares about are the multi-million dollar bonuses they give to top executives. My wife is one of those fighting to keep the benefits that she has had for years. It seems that due to the anti-union stance of the Baggers and the re_Pigs the company is making a dramatic increase in anti union rhetoric in the hopes of gaining support from these reactionaries.
- 10 months ago
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Wyley_Wombat
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Buckeye_Bill
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Wyley_Wombat:
Whoa Nelly! You worked in telemechaniques, too? I have recently learned that Frosty46 was in the telecommunications field, too! I have worn many "hats", some of which were in the fields of voice and data!
Small world.
And, as a telemechanique (fancy word for phone man, Hee hee), I rubbed shoulders with everone from CEOa down to the janitors and saw first-hand who does what within a company!
The executives are a bunch of losers...but they hang together like Rethuglicans, though. Wait...most ARE Rethuglicans!
Yeah, a man can learn a lot when in the boardroom or a hospital for that matter! Lawyers...I hate lawyers! And, if you want to know who the stupidest people are and can be nearly impossible to teach them how new equipment works, try educating a school administrator on how to answer a phone or make a call to the outside world! They always get the baddest telecommunicationd devices and you have to bring it down to one, if the phone rings, pick it up and say, "Hello"., or two, if you want to make a call, pick up the phne and pretend you're at home and dial away! Voicemail? Ha! Auto-attend? Ha!
But, that's a story for another day.
LOL
- 10 months ago
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Buckeye_Bill
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Wyley_Wombat
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Buckeye_Bill:
Started as a CO tech did voice and data, then as site engineer for satellite earth station, then, operations manager for broadcast services.
- 10 months ago
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Wyley_Wombat
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WagonMaster
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I really hate big corporations. I worked in a small one years ago and left it to be a janitor. And I was an accidental VP. The bull-shit corps pull on workers is unbelieveable
- 10 months ago
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WagonMaster
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Buckeye_Bill
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WagonMaster:
Are you happy?
I think that's far more important than being miserable with a so-called "good" job.
So long as one can pay the bills and put some money aside for retirement, it's a good job, too.
As a quote from the movie, The Grapes of Wrath, "Why, them's starving wages", as they picked and carried two tons of peaches for a dollar.
That's not a good job.
- 10 months ago
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Buckeye_Bill
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Buckeye_Bill
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This is the "song" I listen to EVERY Friday!
And especially in honor for all those Verison workers on strike now!
Yabba Dabba Doo!
Tell that slave driver to shove that sweat shop right up his as......pirin takes care of a headache!
We broke our slave dirver's little bitty ba.......all's well that ends well!
LOL
- 10 months ago
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Buckeye_Bill
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WagonMaster
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Buckeye_Bill:
Another great post !!
- 10 months ago
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WagonMaster
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cherry5000
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I am so glad that the verizon workers are fighting back. they have my support.
- 10 months ago
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cherry5000
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Buckeye_Bill
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cherry5000:
We the working class don't have a fancy lobbyist group fighting for our rights and interests in Washington! But corporations sure do. So, we must carry the fight to those who do not have our wellbeing in mind.
Because, who else will fight for us but us?
- 10 months ago
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Buckeye_Bill
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EdJoyProductions
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Viva Verizon Employee Revolution! Never surrender!
- 10 months ago
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EdJoyProductions
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Buckeye_Bill
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EdJoyProductions:
It's up to us now. No one is going to be in our corner fighting for our survival.
We must lean on each other.
Who else is there?
- 10 months ago
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Buckeye_Bill
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EdJoyProductions
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Buckeye_Bill:
Too true.
- 10 months ago
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EdJoyProductions
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remanns
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EdJoyProductions:
+^d ! HUZZAH !
- 10 months ago
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remanns
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Buckeye_Bill
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Let the games corporations play begin!
Soon every company will see the green light that the Republican Party has shown them to demand all the benefits and pay increases that the working class has gained through time and effort going all the way back to the Reagan years be taken back!
Holidays, sick days, vacation days, leave of absences due to personal or family illness, group health insurance, unemployment insurance is being stripped away now with Republican governors cutting back on the weeks UI can be collected from something most pay for through paycheck deductions.
Yuppers. I can read the writing on the company wall now! Nothing for the working stiff but a hassle and a promise to make our lives miserable.
- 10 months ago
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Buckeye_Bill