From: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Friday, 21 May 1999 06:08
Subject: Carpenters at Airport Protest Against Union Leadership

More on the Wildcat strike in San Fran!
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http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/chronicle/archive/1999/05/21
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N3631.DTL

Carpenters at Airport Protest Against Union Leadership
Workers dislike new way to OK labor contracts

Lisa Fernandez, Chronicle Staff Writer    Friday, May 21, 1999

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Angry with what they say are low wages and a lack of coffee breaks, 
about 250 carpenters and 1,750 allies stopped work at San Francisco 
International Airport yesterday, bringing a $2.4 billion construction 
project to a near halt.  

Smaller groups of carpenters also stopped working at the San 
Francisco construction sites of Kaiser Permanente Medical Center and 
the future PacBell Park in China Basin, where carpenters plan to 
focus their efforts today.  

Although it did not affect airline service, the loss of that many 
workers, which included a sympathetic group of electricians, plumbers 
and painters, cost the airport terminal project about $1 million, 
airport spokesman Ron Wilson estimated.  

It also added a day's delay to the project, which should be finished 
by late 2000 but is already more than a month behind schedule because 
of last winter's El Nino storms, Wilson said.  

Carrying simple cardboard signs that read ``More Money,'' the jeans- 
clad members of the Northern California Carpenters Regional Council 
protesting at the airport yesterday said they wanted $10 more an 
hour, coffee breaks and every other Friday off. But they are not 
upset with the contractors, who pay them almost $27 an hour.  

Instead, they are angry with their own union officials, whom they say 
sold them out last Saturday by voting on a weak four-year contract. 
For the first time, only a delegation of representatives, rather than 
all the carpenters, voted on the contract. A union mandate 18 months 
ago ordered the change in voting.  

That erosion of internal democracy is at the core of the controversy, 
carpenters say.  

``Times are booming,'' said Jonathan Noel of Hayward, who is helping 
to build a nine-story parking garage at the airport. ``Electricians 
and plumbers are making $34 an hour, and carpenters are the lowest- 
paid men on the job.''  

Carpenters have urged their union leadership to have a new vote. They 
argued the delegation, which voted 127 to 107 for the contract, 
didn't represent the 16,000 working members. Some jeered at their 
union officials, pointing to their suits, leather chairs and six-
figure salaries in contrast to the earnings of the rank and file.  

Union officials say the carpenters' protest is an unusual situation.  

In his 25 years as a union official, Regional Council President Gary 
Martin said, this is only the second time he knows of when union 
members protested against their own leadership.  

Union leaders said 73 percent of union members who answered a survey 
said they approved the contract's language.  

The union's delegation signed off on the best contract it thought it 
could get, he said, noting that the contract gives the carpenters an 
extra $5 an hour over four years.  

The trouble is, he said, that the union is not strong enough to 
negotiate more than that. If the union presses for more, contractors 
simply will hire from the large pool of nonunion workers who earn 
about $20 an hour with no fringe benefits, according to Martin.  

Nonunion contractors also were critical of the carpenters' protest.  

Kevin Dayton, who represents a trade association of 325 Northern 
California nonunion contractors, says the carpenters' unsanctioned 
strike violates the labor agreement the unions signed with the 
airport in 1996. Construction unions signed a deal with the airport 
promising no strikes, pickets or work stoppages if the airport would 
hire only union employees.  

Because of the no-strike agreement, Wilson said, an arbitrator 
determined last night that the unions must inform their members that 
anyone who honors the strike will be subject to discharge or ordered 
to pay damages. If the union leadership does not tell its members, 
Wilson said, the leaders will be subject to similar penalties.  

Dayton's group is pursuing a lawsuit, which is now before 
California's Supreme Court, arguing that the deal violates 
competitive bidding.  

Union president Martin said he believes the carpenters deserve more 
money and a chance to sip coffee a couple times a day on the job. But 
he was firm that there would not be a new contract vote.  

``That would be like taking a second bite of the apple,'' he said.  

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