----- Original Message ----- 
From: Doug Henwood <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: lbo-talk <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Monday, August 21, 2000 10:53 AM
Subject: Verizon: union win


TheStandard.com - August 21, 2000

TOP GROKS
~~~~~~~~~
Zap! Union Win at Verizon Jolts the New Economy

Did something just happen? Unions goosed the new economy with their
power surge at Verizon. Now a deal has been reached and, as in any
outage when the lights go off and then come on again, the media are
rubbing their eyes and wondering what just happened.

The eastern establishment print media, that is. Most online outlets
went with wire service reports of Verizon's agreement with two unions
to end their 15-day strike. Unions for the middle-Atlantic region are
still waiting for management approval. Media reports emphasized that
the agreement isn't a garden-variety deal for wages. It hammers at
issues of job security, work-related stress and benefits.

The terms? Verizon may relocate just 0.7 percent of jobs to a
different region each year. Customer-service reps get five 30-minute
breaks a week to do something besides take phone calls. And since
Verizon is a Netco wannabe, the company is springing for a round of
stock options for everyone. Verizon will dole out 100 stock options to
each union employee by the end of this year, according to the Wall
Street Journal.

Did union organizers slip past the velvet ropes of Internetdom, or act
out a tedious tradition that inconvenienced East Coast dialers? The
New York Times pegged the deal as a victory for the unions: In
addition to the contract perks, they get the right to organize within
the wireless division, in which just 50 of 32,000 employees belong to
a union. No more fussy elections, the agreement specifies. Now
organizers get to hand out ballots. If more than 55 percent come back
with "yes" checked, the Times wrote, we have a union. (Note to the
Times: It's probably safe now to stop running the handy little
pronunciation guide that informs us it's "Vuh-RISE-en.")

Will workers at other telcos similarly jolt management by organizing?
The Washington Post's page-one coverage handicapped unions' hold on
new-economy venture as "tenuous." The New York Times chimed in that
there's no certainty that workers not yet unionized want to be. But
organizers lick their chops over the prospects, and the Times noted
that SBC Communications has the same provision for card-check
organizing. Small groups of workers have even been organized at
Microsoft and also at Amazon, the Times' Simon Romero reported. Paid
overtime at Amazon? Where working long and unpaid extra hours is
called "getting efficient"? Now that would be a shock. - Deborah
Asbrand

50,000 Verizon Staffers Go Back to Work (IDG)
http://www.thestandard.com/article/display/0,1151,17851,00.html?nl=mg

Accord Is Reached for Most Workers in Phone Walkout
http://www.nytimes.com/library/financial/082100verizon-talks.html
(Registration required.)

Most Workers End Strike at Verizon
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A60918-2000Aug20.html

Verizon Reaches Tentative Agreement With Two of Three Bargaining Units
http://interactive.wsj.com/articles/SB966713955320859066.htm
(Paid subscription required.)

Verizon Settles Strike (AP)
http://www.usatoday.com/news/ndssun03.htm

Verizon, Unions Cut a Deal
http://cnnfn.cnn.com/2000/08/21/news/verizon/

Verizon Reaches Deal With Most Unions (Reuters)
http://www.zdnet.com/zdnn/stories/news/0,4586,2617483,00.html

Getting Connected
http://www.newsday.com/coverage/current/news/monday/nd9355.htm

Verizon 'Strikes' A Deal With Unions in New York
http://www.nypost.com/news/35849.htm


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