Unions Debate Contract Terms
Thursday, September 20, 2007
(The Campus-Times, University of Rochester)THE CAMPUS-TIMES
(University of
Rochester)
September 20,
2007
UNIONS DEBATE CONTRACT
TERMS
By Erin
Philbrick
(Rochester, NY) - The
contracts of the members of the Local
1199 SEIU and
SEIU Local 200 United,
comprised of over 1,400 service workers
employed on
the River Campus and at the UR
Medical Center, expire on Sept.
29.
Negotiations over new contract terms
began Aug. 8 and are still
continuing
without resolve.
"There
was a brief strike at UR in 1975 to
form the union when the
University refused
to enable a contract," 1199 SEIU
Vice President Bruce
Popper said. "There has
not been a work stoppage on the
campus ever since.
We've gotten close a
couple of times; we've stayed up all
night a couple of
times to try to work
things out."
Popper also noted
that, two years ago, employees worked without a
contract
for six months until
a compromise was reached.
"We,
unfortunately, agreed to a contract a
couple of years ago that has new
employees
starting out at a lower and slower
scale," he said. "The
employees eventually
catch up, but way
out."
Associate Vice President of Human
Resources Charles Murphy, one of
the
University's representatives in the
negotiations, was unable to be
reached
for comment as of press
time.
The union originated in the URMC
during the 1970s.
"The basic reason for
the union is worker's rights,"
Popper said.
Members of the union
include patient care technicians,
nursing unit
secretaries, surgical
assistants, environmental and facilities
maintenance
employees and dietary,
transportation and materials processing
staff.
In the negotiations, union
members are looking for eight main
things. They
are requesting to sign a
three-year contract; to maintain their
health
benefits; to earn fair wage
increases; to end the lower wages for
newer
employees; to increase training and
educational opportunities; to
create a
child care fund; to improve dental
care and to respect the right of
other
UR workers to join the
union.
"For me, as a union employee of
the University, what's most important
is
health care," Dining Services
employee Dawn Marshall-Hosier said. "I have
a
family, I am married and we
depend on health care to keep our children
and
myself healthy."
For
the first time in many years of contract
negotiations, the union is
not
looking to increase health care, only to
keep it as it currently
stands.
Presently, workers must pay a
co-pay, but there is not a payroll
deduction
for the premium.The University is
looking into this type of
plan.
"I think it would be like $400 a
month for family coverage; that
means I
would have to get at least a $7
raise to make the money I take home
and pay
for family coverage,"
Marshall-Hosier said.
Two years ago, the
union was put in charge of managing most of its
health
care system. In doing
so, workers accepted higher out-of-pocket
expenses
and agreed to a mail-order
prescription service in order to cut costs. As
a
result, there was a $2.6
million surplus, which allowed for the
union
members to ask for the same
health care benefits.
"We've told them
that as long as the workers get a
modest wage increase
each year... we don't
need any more money than the rate
of the wage
increase [to cover our
healthcare expenses]," Popper
said.
Although contract negotiations
have always been for two-year
contracts in
the past due to health care
cost calculations, the surplus
provides for
enough money in the budget to
ask for a three-year contract
instead.
On the whole, the union members
are pleased with what the
University offers
its employees. There are
employee training programs that
allow for
employees to earn GEDs, receive
computer training and earn higher
education
degrees such as a Licensed
Practical Nurse degree.
"It's not
just health care, it's training and upgrading,
it's tuition
benefits for
children, it's just so vast. I've been here 13
years, and I
could see myself
being here for the next 13 years,"
Marshall-Hosier said.
"[However,] if
health insurance is taken away, I will really
have to
consider whether I stay
here or move on."
There will be contract
negotiations every day next
week. Present at the
meetings are committees
from both sides of the
negotiations, speakers on
the various
benefits requested and a mediator sent
in from the
federal
government.
Philbrick is
a member of the class
of 2009.
