Seven Railroad unions have created a bargaining coalition that will coodinate contract negotions,the international brotherhood of teamsters announced Monday. Individual unions will not sign off on tentative agreements with rail carriers until coalition concur,according to a statement from the teamsters. The coalitions’s seven members represent nearly 85,000 rail workers. "For the first time in decades,rail unions are joining together to make sure our members get a contract,"said George Franscisco,the coalition’s coordinator and president of the National Conferance of Firemen and Oilers.–Stacie Hamel.(OmahaWorldHerald).
[bow]BNSF[bow]
Rail unions form historic coalition
WASHINGTON, January 4 – On January 3, for the first time in two decades, seven major railroad unions have joined together in the creation of the “Rail Labor Bargaining Coalition” to coordinate upcoming contract negotiations with the rail carriers. The seven unions of the coalition represent nearly 85,000 rail workers from American railroad corporations. The Coalition will develop a coordinated contract negotiating strategy and each individual union will not sign off on any tentative agreements with the rail carriers until all the coalition members concur.
“With serving of notice to the rail carriers to commence contract negotiations, this Coalition has completed a first successful step toward developing a unified bargaining strategy,” said George Francisco, coordinator of the Coalition and President of the National Conference of Firemen & Oilers (SEIU). “For the first time in decades, rail unions are joining together to make sure our members get a fair contract. This year at the negotiating table, the rail carriers will face a very different atmosphere. This year the rail unions are united in purpose.”
“This Coalition is the reason the BLE and the BMWE merged with the Teamsters under the banner of the Teamsters Rail Conference,” said John Murphy, a Teamster International Vice President and Special Assistant to President Hoffa for the Teamsters Rail Conference. “Even though these unions work in a variety of crafts, they are united in their demands for job security, better wages and safer working conditions.”
By presenting a unified front at the bargaining table, members of the Rail Coalition have taken an important step in combating rail management’s divide and conquer bargaining strategy. That strategy features the coercion of individual organizations into divisive contract settlements, which then are said to form a ‘pattern’ of substandard agreements that, in
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It’s interesting to note that the United Transportation Union, the Transportation Communications Union and the International Association of Machinists are not part of this coalition. While the ethical practices of prior UTU leaders seem to be at the level of the Teamsters, the IAM leadership (whether you agree with them or not) has long been beyond reproach.
This coalition is for negotiations with the NCC or National Carriers Conference so AMTK would not be involved.
It will be interesting to see if the coalition can stay together. I would expect the carriers would isolate one of the unions with a really poor offer and continue to keep them dissatisfied when all the other unions are ready to settle. I wi***he unions success but I think the political connections between them are tenuous if the NCC wants to divide them.