| Record-Journal 11/16/2006, Page A08 |
Cox technicians decide
against joining IBEW
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By Mary Ellen Godin
Record-Journal business editor
MERIDEN — Cox Com?munications field technicians here and in Manchester vot?ed Wednesday to reject union representation
from the International Brother?hood Electrical Workers Lo?cal 2323.
Polling was by secret bal?lot at Cox sites in both cities, with votes
tallied in Man?chester. The IBEW needed 50 percent plus one vote to
rec?ognize the Meriden and Man?chester workers as a bargain?ing unit.
Company and union officials oversaw the count?ing.
The union reported the vote to
reject by a 40-20 mar?gin, while Cox said the tally was 40-19.
Last month, the union gathered enough pledge cards — 30 percent of the
af?fected workers — to petition Cox for a vote in each city. Enfield
did not have the re?quired number of pledge cards to be added to the
bar?gaining
unit. The workers’ rejection ends this round of
union campaigning, countered by Cox’s anti-union push.
“We are pleased that our Connecticut field service representatives have
voted to preserve Cox’s positive, pro-employee work environ?ment — an
environment where employees are treated well and are comfortable
communicating directly with their supervisors and man?agers,” said
Leigh Ann Wois?ard, spokeswoman for Cox. “By saying ‘ no’ to
third-party union representation, our employees have voted to preserve
this culture of growth,
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stability and oppor?tunity.”
The Rhode Island-based
union represents about 1,200 telecommunications workers and was
contacted by several workers requesting informa?tion about union
representa?tion. Workers complained about cuts in benefits and raises,
and favoritism shown to employees who were giv?en better shifts and
training opportunities.
Craig Duffy, organizer/vice president of the IBEW, said the workers
were angry and disappointed after Wednesday’s vote.
“The main reason it lost was because over the last four weeks, the
employees had to endure mandatory meetings,” Duffy said. “There was a
lot of scare tactics and the employees were frightened by the com?pany.”
The union’s strongest de?fenders called the system unfair Wednesday
because Cox was given ample op?portunity during working hours to
present anti-union materials, and the union wasn’t allowed 10 minutes
to make its case, said one employee who requested anonymity.
But Woisard!
counters that the company works hard to take care of its employees and
establish open relation?ships between supervisors and workers. She also
points to a recent survey that shows about 90 percent of Cox employees
would rec?ommend Cox as a good place to work.
Duffy said the union would continue to send out mailings because there
is still a desire in Meriden and Manchester. He said without a
contract, the workers are at-will em?ployees with no job or bene?fits
protection
mgodin@record-journal.com
(203) 317-2255
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Union demonstrates at Cox Manchester offices
Journal Inquirer --By Harian Levy 10/27/06
Manchester-
Two dozen union members from across the state, Rhode Island and
Massachusetts held a "support rally"Thursday morning at Cox
Communications offices hoping to convince the 64 Cox Field technicians
in Manchester and Meriden to vote to join the International Brotherhood
of Electrical Workers in a Nov 15th election.
None
of the 300 Cox Connecticut workers , nor any of the 1,200 in New
England are union members. The IBEW has been holding weekly
informational meetings with the 64 Cox workers 34 in Manchester and 30
in Meriden for the last 12 months in anticipation of the vote, said
Craig Duffy of Rhode Island Local 2323 which is organized the morning
demonstration.
"The
main issues were health care costs, their rate of pay, and their
general treatment" said Duffy. "They feel they're not getting the
respect that they deserve and not getting the pay for their training
and expertise that they have."
Verizon workers get much higher wages and pay much less for health care, Duffy said.
But
Verizons union members pay weekly dues Cox spokeswoman Leigh Ann
Woisard responded. Cox offers a very competitive package, she said.
"Our wages have gone up 20 percent over the last five years and we
offer health care coverage, dental, eye care, plus a fully paid pension
plan, a 401K plan with company match, tuition reimbursement, courtest
cable and internet service, discounted cable and fitness club
reimbursement."
It's
all a question of dues, Woisard said. "The reality of the matter is
that the union has been bleeding members for quite some time, and they
are targeting employees because they need more dues paying members,"
Woisard said. "Thats why Cox is a prime target, but we don't believe
that they have our employees' best interests at heart."
If
the Cox workers join the IBEW, Woisard added there would be 64 Cox
members compared to more than 1,000 Verizon and AT&T workers in the
same unit, Woisard added, "and the question that we are hearing from
our employees is how much influence would they have in the affairs of
the IBEW, given that they represent our major competitors."
| Record-Journal 10/14/2006, Page 9 |
Techs at Cox will vote
on union
Manchester and Meriden workers joined as unit
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By Mary Ellen Godin
Record-Journal business writer
MERIDEN — Cox Communications field technicians here and in Manchester will vote Nov. 15 on whether they
want a Rhode Island electricians union to represent them.
“The employees will finally have the chance to decide on their union,”
said Craig Duffy, organizer/vice president of the International
Brotherhood of Electrical Workers Local 2323. The union also represents
Verizon technical field workers in Rhode Island.
“A lot of it is job security. They love their jobs, they love the
company they work for,” Duffy said. “But they want a voice and they
think a union can provide that security for them.”
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At
a hearing this week in the Hartford office of the National Labor
Relations Board, the union produced enough pledge cards — 30 percent of
affected workers — to petition for a vote in each city.
If workers approve, Meriden and Manchester would be considered one
collective bargaining unit, with 60 to 65 workers. The IBEW, however,
failed to get the needed 30 percent commitment in Cox’s Enfield
location, Duffy said.
Voting will be by secret ballot in Manchester and Meriden. The results
will be taken from the combined total of the two locations and the
union needs 50 percent plus one vote to recognize the Meriden and
Manchester workers as a bargaining unit, Duffy said.
Cox has held steadfastly that
Please see Cox /10
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the
company works hard to treat its employees well and encourages
communication between worker and supervisor. Spokeswoman Leigh Ann
Woisard said last week that Cox management was confident the employees
would reject the union. She added that about 90 percent of Cox
employees stated in recent surveys that they would recommend the
company as a good place to work.
The union entered the picture when several Meriden field technicians
contacted its national headquarters in Washington D.C. last November.
They were concerned about their status as at-will employees, their pay
and health benefits.
One of the workers, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said the
group had learned their pay was at least $8-perhour lower than field
workers at other companies such as AT&T, Verizon and CL&P, and
their health care costs were increasing at an alarming rate. He did
not know how much Comcast cable pole workers earned. The Meriden
workers sat down with several unions before selecting the IBEW to help
them organize.
The worker said he’s uncertain
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how all his coworkers feel about joining
the union, but maintained that the mood in the Meriden garage is relaxed, but less so in Manchester.
After being contacted by the technicians, Duffy set up a union blog
site on the Internet for all prospective union members to obtain
information, share comments and ask questions. Recent posts reflect
opinions on both sides of the issue.
The workers are grilling Duffy on the history of
the union, it’s charter and bylaws and its work on behalf of the Verizon employees.
Duffy claims the union secured wages for Verizon workers that were
$10 to $15 higher than those paid by Cox Communications, and with
lower health care costs.
But some Cox employees expressed concerns over the strength of the
Verizon contract, and had doubts the union could effectively represent
employees at competing companies.
Duffy counters that unions have been doing that since their inception.
He likens it to the Teamsters representing truckers at all companies.
“The union works for the employees,
not the companies,” Duffy said
mgodin@record-journal.com (203) 317-2255
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Cox workers could get a chance
to vote for union
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By Mary Ellen Godin
Record-Journal staff
MERIDEN — Cox Communications technicians will find out Tuesday
when they will vote on union representation.
The technicians filed a petition Sept. 26 with the National Labor
Relations Board asking to be represented by the International
Brotherhood of Electrical Workers Local 2323.
The workers have complained about decreased wages and benefits, as well as working conditions at the cable company. They are also concerned about company practices that they
claim compromise customer service.
The IBEW needed half of the 23 Meriden employees to sign the petition
before it could be sent to the labor board and Cox management for
review. Cox has 200 employees at its Enfield and Manchester
operations and the union has organizing efforts in those locations now.
“The techs at Cox Communications feel
they have been ignored for too long,” said Craig Duffy organizer/vice president of IBEW Local 2323, which represents Cox workers in Rhode Island. “They are doing this
despite years of union-busting by Cox Communications that has attempted to silence its employees.”
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According to Duffy, all eyes are on
what happens in Meriden.
Duffy said Cox has made it clear it did not want the IBEW bargaining
for its workers unless it had petitions from all Connecticut
operations. The hearing on Tuesday in the NLRB’s Hartford office will
determine whether the Meriden workers can be recognized as a single
bargaining unit. In a written statement, Cox acknowledged that it was reviewing the petition.
“The company strongly believes that representation by a union is not in
the best interest of our field services representatives or any of our
employees,” said spokeswoman Leigh Ann Woisard. “The company works
hard every day to create a positive, pro-employee work environment
where all employees are treated well and are comfortable communicating
directly with their supervisors and managers.”
Cox will be communicating with its employees about the petition and
Woisard is confident the employees will ultimately reject union
representation. A recent employee survey found that 84 percent of its
employees said they would recommend Cox as a good place to work.
Duffy accused the company of stalling so it could intimidate the workers
mgodin@record-journal.com (203) 317-2255
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Rhode Island Fiber Solutions Center Builds IBEW and Verizon
September 19, 2006
Linking
ground-breaking bargaining and political lobbying, Cranston, R.I., IBEW
Local 2323 has teamed up with Verizon to develop one of five U.S.
centers to support its emerging cable products market. Since last
February, the Providence center has hired 100 new IBEW members and
provided transfer opportunities to 65 current members to fill two new
highly-paid technical positions. Verizon anticipates hiring an
additional 200 employees over the next year and one-half.
"Copper
dial tone jobs are dying on the vine," says Craig Duffy, Local 2323
organizer. "With the new center, IBEW members will have opportunities
to migrate to where the jobs are." The IBEW-Verizon agreement provides
for the company to match each new hire with the posting of an internal
bid for current members of Verizon Systems Council T-6, covering New
England. Already, some IBEW members from New York and former CWA
members have been hired at the center, after the requirements covering
T-6 members were satisfied.
Local
2323 Business Manager William McGowan led efforts to convince Verizon
to invest in the center, lobbying for state tax credits to help finance
work force training. International Representative Robert Corraro,
Second District organizing coordinator, says, "McGowan's reputation for
fairness and hard work with Verizon and his membership were critical to
Verizon's decision to locate the center in Rhode Island."
Workers filling the new IBEW positions--fiber network technician and fiber customer support analyst-- will test and activate
new internet/cable installations and help customers who are having trouble.
The R.I. center is one of several IBEW-represented facilities. Fiber support operations in California, Texas, Virginia
and New York are organized by CWA.
IBEW
Local 2323 has already demonstrated the benefits of unionism to new
members who have had no experience with organized labor, or held
negative impressions. IBEW has negotiated pay increases for most of
the first wave of workers hired and arbitration is planned on other
issues.
While the bargaining relationship between IBEW and Verizon is complex, says Duffy, Verizon needs the union's political
clout in New England to increase its cable presence which depends upon securing local franchises.
While looking ahead, Local 2323 is waging an aggressive organizing campaign covering dial-tone workers at Cox Communications
in Rhode Island and Connecticut.
Labor climate spurs Verizon growth
By Bridget Botelho, Staff Writer
Union relations help spark company’s recent fiber-optic expansion in R.I.
The
business manager of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers
Local 2323, William McGowan, has nothing but good things to say about
Verizon, a company with which he negotiates labor contracts.
Donna
Cupelo, Verizon’s president for the Rhode Island and Massachusetts
region, says the relationship between Verizon and the union is the best
in the country.
It
hasn’t always been this way and there are still occasional setbacks,
but the newfound alliance factored into Verizon’s decision to deploy
its broadband fiber-optic network in Rhode Island and base its New
England region Fiber Solutions Center in the state.
Verizon is investing millions in infrastructure and employee training in Rhode Island at its Providence
location – one of 28 locations in the country that the company could have based the operations.
Verizon
began deploying its fiber-to-the-premises, FTTP, network in Rhode
Island and launched a call center, the Fiber Solutions Center, in
Providence in January that will add 350 local jobs over the next few
years.
“When we were deciding where
to locate our center, we had to consider the labor situation and it was a factor,” said Cupelo.
Tax
credit programs – the Job Training Credit and the Enterprise Zone Tax
Credit – were also major incentives for Verizon to base operations in
Rhode Island.
“Verizon
could have taken their business to another state. To get their
investment here, there has to be a good climate – both with labor and
the General Assembly,” said McGowan, who is also a former state
representative from Warwick. “As a union leader, I have to have a bit
of vision and a good relationship with employers.” IBEW represents
1,000 electrical workers in Rhode Island, many of them employed by
Verizon.
After
the IBEW workers install the FTTP network, they will also maintain the
system and work in technical support at the Fiber Solutions Center. Pay
for the jobs starts around $1,000 per 40-hour week with fully paid
health benefits.
McGowan
worked with Verizon to keep their health insurance costs down by
developing a plan to encourage employees to use generic versions of
drugs, requiring the use of primary-care physicians and increased the
co-pay on emergency room visits to discourage needless visits in cases
where a regular doctor is a better option, he said.
The
IBEW has a collective bargaining agreement with Verizon that extends
through 2008. Under the terms set in 2003, Verizon cannot hire outside
contractors and workers are considered Verizon employees. Those working
at the Fiber Solutions Center and doing the FTTP installations will get
three weeks of expense paid training at the Community College of Rhode
Island on company time.
“There
have been many retirements in the last few years so we have a new work
force. If we continue on the path unions often follow, those jobs may
not be renewed (when the contract is up in 2008). We give the company
flexibility and they give us the training to take our workers into the
future,” McGowan said.
Cupelo
said because Rhode Island is the most penetrated state in the country
in terms of broadband communication, having a competent, dedicated work
force gives the company a competitive edge. “It wasn’t always the case
that labor relations in the state were good. We went through many years
of trying to figure it out,” Cupelo said.
The demand for
electrical and electronic goods is expected to keep increasing, but
foreign competition for those products and increasing use of labor in
those countries will limit employment opportunities for workers in the
future, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reports.
The loss of jobs to foreign countries highlights the need for a positive union-employer
climate in the United States, McGowan said.
“If (unions and employers) keep negotiating the same way it always
has, we’ll keep losing jobs,” McGowan said.
Published 01/29/2005
Issue 19-42
Cox Cable Campaign Gains
Steam in New England
March 10, 2006 (IBEW International Journal)
An
official at Cox Communications just might have supplied the nation's
union busters with 2006's best "what not to do" story while opposing an
IBEW organizing campaign in Connecticut. The drive, which has spread to
Rhode Island, features grassroots efforts by several New England
locals, direct mailings and a popular new Web site:
The official asked for questions at a captive audience meeting in a South Windsor, Conn., banquet hall, but he became distracted
by IBEW members who gathered outside to support Cox workers.
An
employee, who hadn't yet decided if he would sign a union authorization
card, asked if Cox was going to institute a new technician job
classification. "So you think you deserve better pay and benefits,"
said Colli. "Let's face it guys, you're already overpaid. You're only
'coax techs.' There isn't much science to what you guys do," he
added. "I could train a monkey to do your job."
When the freshly-insulted workers left the meeting in company vans, they passed a banner from Cranston, R.I., IBEW Local 2323.
Horns blared and many rolled down their windows and shouted "Go union,"
said Bob Corraro, District 2 organizing coordinator. Corraro had been
approached by local police outside the meeting who were answering a
complaint from Cox Communications. The police left when it was
established that IBEW members were legally assembled.
Members of Hartford Locals 35 and 42 and New Haven Local 90
stood out in the cold to support Cox employees. Corraro says that the
solidarity effort--which included a contingent of construction
members--was boosted by legislation which has been proposed in the
Connecticut legislature to make mandatory captive audience meetings
illegal.
IBEW
organizing efforts at Cox, which shares Connecticut's cable market with
Comcast, Adelphia and Charter Communications, began in November 2004
after a Cox worker contacted the International union. Corraro brought
together a core group of about 12 of Cox's 130 workers in the state
and, "taking it one step at a time," he began to hold meetings of up to
20 workers.
Simultaneously, Corraro contacted Local 2323 and invited that local's organizers to assist the Connecticut campaign as
a springboard to rallying Rhode Island's 600 Cox workers to the IBEW.
Soon,
Local 2323's Web site and its message board were pumping up the IBEW's
Rhode Island Cox campaign. Created and maintained by Local 2323
organizer Craig Duffy, the site had 42,000 hits in its first two weeks
online. The benefits of union affiliation are highlighted in answers to
questions from unrepresented workers. The site includes information on
everything from the wealth of the company's owners-- the Cox sisters,
worth a combined $25 billion--to accounts about workers who have been
terminated by the company for taking legitimate medical leaves of
absence.
Cox
managers are already holding captive audience meetings in Rhode Island
to scare off support for the union. But Corraro says that the terrific
response of employees to the union's message offers promise that enough
authorization cards will be signed to move to NLRB elections in both
states.
In
a letter to Cox workers, William C. McGowan, business manager of Local
2323 says: "IBEW 2323 represents workers in broadband, video, DSL,
Internet and telephony. When we negotiate labor agreements with
corporations such as Verizon, AT&T and Avaya, management points out
the huge disparities in pay and benefits in our union contracts
compared to non-union competitors, like Cox. The union feels that if
we are successful in improving your wages and benefit, it will help all
workers that we represent in the industry
Union makes bid for Cox technicians
A Cox Communications official
says the company's employees are not interested in unionizing.
01:00 AM EST on Saturday, March 11, 2006
BY TIMOTHY C. BARMANN
Journal Staff Writer
The union that represents telephone workers at Verizon Communications has begun a drive to unionize technicians at Verizon's chief competitor in Rhode Island, Cox Communications.
The International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers,
Local 2323, has distributed union authorization cards to about 150 Cox workers in Connecticut,
and plans to mail them to about 900 workers in Rhode Island
beginning Monday, according to William McGowan, business manager of the local.
"We've heard from a number of Cox employees in Connecticut and Rhode Island who want
to be represented by the union," McGowan said.
But Cox said that's not what the company is hearing
from its employees.
"Thus
far, our employees continue to tell us they don't want or need a union
to speak on their behalf," said John Wolfe, vice president of
government and public affairs for Cox. "We think that's because we work
hard to create a pro-employee environment."
The organizing drive is taking place at a time when
union membership in the United States
is at a 23-year low. Membership peaked in 1983, when 20.1 percent of wage and salaried workers Belonged to a union, compared with 12.5 percent last year, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
The
telecommunications industry remains one of the most unionized. But even
there, unions have had a difficult time maintaining membership levels.
About 56 percent of telecommunications workers were unionized in 1983,
compared with 24 percent in 2001, according to a 2003 academic paper by
Harry Katz and Rosemary Batt of Cornell University, and Jeffrey
Keefe of Rutgers University.
Last year, 22.6 percent of telecom workers were represented
by unions, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
The
decline is closely tied with the dramatic changes in the industry since
the breakup of AT&T in 1983, according to the authors. Those
include mergers and job cuts by the Baby Bells, the birth of new
competitors such as wireless phone companies, and the expansion into
telephone and Internet services by cable companies. Most of the new
jobs created by this expansion have been nonunion.
Cox's Wolfe said that the union has been trying to
organize the company's workers to bolster its own membership levels.
"Obviously, they need to continue to find new members,
new sources of revenues," he said. "They consider our employees a potential target."
But Local 2323's McGowan said it was the Cox workers
who sought out the union.
There
is an "overall level of discontent," McGowan said, about increases in
employee health-care benefit costs, disparate wages compared with
Verizon workers, and a lack of job protection and seniority rights.
McGowan
said that previous efforts to unionize Cox workers were mounted by IBEW
Local 99, an electrical contractors' union. Local 2323, which
represents about 1,000 telephone workers at Verizon, is a better fit
for Cox employees, McGowan said.
"It seems to be resonating with the employees of Cox
that our members do the same type of work they're doing."
The union has held rallies at Cox locations, including
one on Thursday at a facility in Manchester, Conn.
The local plans to bolster its organizing efforts in Rhode Island
over the next couple of weeks, McGowan said.
Local 2323 has also posted a Web site, gotunion.org, which offers a comparison of wages and benefits offered by Cox and Verizon. According to the chart, a technician with five
years' experience is paid $17.40 an hour by Cox, and $31.18 per hour by Verizon.
Asked
if Cox pays less than Verizon, Wolfe said he didn't know. "I don't know
if you can do an apples-to-apples comparison." He said that wage
information was not the type of information the company would release
publicly.
Wolfe
also questioned the union's motives in trying to organize Cox, given
that the union represents workers from a company that competes with
several of Cox's services.
(Verizon recently applied for permission to offer
cable television service in Rhode Island, while Cox has
been offering telephone service for several years.)
"Clearly,
the IBEW has said they support Verizon's efforts to compete with us,"
he said. "We don't believe they necessarily have the best interest of
Cox or its employees at heart. They've aligned pretty tightly with our
largest single competitor."
Wolfe
said that internal surveys of employees suggest they are happy. The
most recent survey, taken about 18 months ago, found that about 90
percent of employees "would recommend Cox as a great place to work to
their family and friends," Wolfe said.
Even
so, Cox has mobilized to oppose this most recent organizing drive,
holding meetings with employees and giving them fliers and company
memos that question the union's motives, and whether union
representation would really be in the employees' best interest.
For example, one flier that the union said was distributed
by Cox suggested the union wasn't providing employees with all the facts.
Wolfe said the company is encouraging employees "to
approach this with an open mind."
Regarding the union's claim of providing job security,
he said that Cox has been growing and hiring employees, unlike most traditional telephone companies.
"This company has no history whatsoever of layoffs
or work-force reductions," he said.
If
the union is able to collect signatures from at least 30 percent of the
workers, it can ask federal labor regulators to hold an election to
determine whether employees want to be represented by Local 2323. The
union would be authorized to represent workers and to negotiate a
contract if more than 50 percent of the votes cast are in favor of
unionization.
tbarmann@projo.com / (401) 277-7369
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Cox employees plan to meet with union again
By Mary Ellen
Godin, Record-Journal business editor
MERIDEN
— Cox Communication workers on East Main Street have been meeting with
representatives of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers
Local 2323 over pay and working conditions at the giant cable company.
Cox
employees have complained to the Rhode Island-based union about company
changes in the past two years that have decreased customer service and
eroded relations with the company.
Employees
have told the Record-Journal that their raises have decreased in recent
years, health insurance deductibles have jumped and working conditions
have worsened.
There
was an informational session at the East Main Street Cox office
Wednesday and the union has another meeting planned on March 1. It is
also talking to Cox employees in Enfield and Manchester.
Its hope is to garner enough pledge cards to allow it
to petition Cox management for bargaining power.
But Cox officials counter that the organizing effort is a rehash of failed union efforts made in the
past decade and the union will lose this round as well.
“As
we’ve increased our success in phone businesses and market share in
incumbent local telephone companies, their union ranks have dwindled,”
said John Wolfe, Cox spokesman. “This is a way to boost their
membership.
Bill
McGowan, the business manager for the IBEW agreed that total union
membership has dwindled, but that the telecommunications representation
is strong. The reason, McGowan said, is that the traditional
union-busting threat to relocate work to non-union areas won’t work.
These jobs can’t be outsourced, McGowan
said.
These
are the employees out on the poles, installing fiber optic cable,
broadband and providing other telecommunications services in the
region. Cox has about 200 employees in the state, Wolfe said. He
acknowledged that the company may have some disgruntled workers, but
it’s a small minority.
“What we’re doing is based upon requests from Cox employees over the past several months,”
McGowan said. “It’s going to be difficult but we’re seeing a very vocal population.”
He
said the union was successful in obtaining a five-year contract with
Verizon Wireless, when other communication giants, including Cox said
it couldn’t be done. Under the contract, the Verizon workers received a
five-year no-layoff guarantee, a pension plan, and a 401K plan and
included a stipulation that contractors were forbidden to perform
bargained for work, a pention
The
IBEW needs to collect about 100 pledge cards before it can petition Cox
management to allow it to negotiate on the workers behalf.
Wolfe said if past union efforts are any indication, this newest campaign will also fail. He said workers are
encouraged to bring their grievances directly to managers to solve problems.
“About 90 percent of employee say
they would recommend Cox,” Wolfe said. “We don’t think a union would benefit anyone at Cox.”
mgodin@record-journal.com
(203) 317-2455
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