Bronx Landlords Threaten to Cancel Union Contract…
By Steve Wishnia
Seeking concessions from hundreds of New York City building-service workers, the trade group representing Bronx landlords has threatened to terminate its four-year contract with 32BJ SEIU — but it has agreed to delay doing so for 30 days beyond the original deadline of March 31
NYC Mayor: ‘My Goal is to Rectify and Correct’ FDNY EMS Pay Inequity
By Bob Hennelly
New York City Mayor Eric Adams this week reiterated his support for full pay parity between the FDNY EMS workforce, which is mostly composed of women and people of color — and the firefighting side of the department, which is mostly white males.
‘We Can’t Continue to Work Like This’ - NYC Transit Workers Demand Safer Conditions
By Steve Wishnia
Subway station agent Benjamin Welcome was working in the 2/3 line part of the Wall Street station on Feb. 16, the day Noreen Mallory, a station agent in the 4/5 line section, got her eye socket broken by an enraged man who punched her repeatedly in the face until passengers on an arriving train intervened.
“If the train hadn’t come in, she would have been on the tracks,” he told Work-Bites.
Mayor Adams Embraces Encryption to Protect NYPD; Cuts Out Press and Endangers EMS
'Operational Security’ Trumps the Right to Know
By Bob Hennelly
New York City Mayor Eric Adams this week dismissed concerns the NYPD’s encrypting of its radio communications will undermine transparency and the ability of the press to report on breaking news — but did say he would look into issues raised by the union that represents FDNY EMS officers about the initial rollout of encryption in Brooklyn North precincts.
NYC Retirees Stand Strong With Ousted DC 37 Officers…
By Joe Maniscalco
Angry municipal retirees do not care what AFSCME Retirees Director and newly-appointed DC37 Retirees Association Administrator Ann Widger says — the union’s decision to put the retirees chapter in receivership last month, they insist, is retribution for fighting back against ongoing efforts to privatize their health care.
Plain and simple.
NYC Mayor: Encrypt NYPD Radio Traffic… And Hide 9/11 WTC Files
By Bob Hennelly
The day after City & State published an analysis of the Adams administration lack of transparency, City Council Speaker Adrienne Adams blasted the Mayor’s encrypting of NYPD radio traffic and his continued suppression of the City’s 9/11 WTC files that would shed light on what the city knew and when it knew it about the toxic air in and around lower Manhattan.
Hochul ‘Locking Out Black Mothers and Black Babies!’ in Brooklyn
By Steve Wishnia
“We’re here for one reason. Brooklyn needs Downstate,” United University Professions leader Frederick E. Kowal told a rally of several hundred people outside the hospital Feb. 29. Many in the crowd protesting the state’s plan to close the East Flatbush facility carried signs or wore T-shirts with the same slogan, in the white-on-black team colors and font of the Brooklyn Nets.
DC 37 Retirees: AFSCME Takeover is All About Medicare Advantage
By Joe Maniscalco
AFSCME, under union President Lee Saunders, says the emergency decision to suspend DC37 Retirees Association officers and lock them out of their offices on February 22, has everything to do with the group’s problematic finances — and nothing to do with them helping the New York City Organization of Public Service Retirees successfully beat back the Medicare Advantage push in town. But does it?
Retired Transit Workers Launch Class Action Suit: Refuse to Be Railroaded into Privatized Health Care
By Steve Wishnia
A group of nine retired transit workers has filed a class-action suit in New York State Supreme Court, seeking to get their access to traditional Medicare restored after they were switched to a private Medicare Advantage plan on Jan. 1.
Why Are More Transit Workers Being Attacked on the Job!?!
By Steve Wishnia
“If it keeps going the way it’s going, there’s going to be a murder,” subway-train operator Evangeline Byars tells Work-Bites.
On Feb. 16, a 58-year-old station agent in the Wall Street station suffered a fractured eye socket when she was attacked by a man she’d woken up from sleeping under a bench.
REI Workers Set the Stage For a Theatrical Showdown in Soho…
By Joe Maniscalco
Union-busting companies know how to deal with walkouts, sickouts, boycotts — and even limited strikes — pretty handily under existing labor law. But how in the world do they confront a theatrical production that puts their exploitation and worker abuses center stage?
How do they contend with art?
Wall St. Devours Kickbacks While the Rest of Us Get Kicked to the Curb…
Editor’s Note: This story originally appeared in The Capitol Hill Citizen and CorporateCrimeReporter.com
By Bob Hennelly
The confluence of ending billions of dollars in federal direct COVID aid — and Governor Greg Abbott [R-Texas] sending tens of thousands of asylum-seeking migrants to New York City — has members of the New York State Legislature calling for an end to the state rebating the one-tenth-of-one-percent Stock Transfer Tax [STT] that was enacted in the early 1900s — but has been refunded back to Wall Street since the 1980s.
‘We Will Be in This Building!’ Medicare Advantage Foes Launch Bid to Win Control of UFT Chapter
By Joe Maniscalco
Former New York City schoolteachers instrumental in beating back the campaign to push 250,000 municipal retirees into a profit-driven Medicare Advantage health insurance program have launched a bold new campaign to seize control of the UFT’s Retired Teachers Chapter — and put a real check on entrenched union president Michael Mulgrew’s unchallenged power.
Work-Bites Reader Spotlight: Support the Fight for Congestion Pricing in NYC
Editor’s Note: The following letter from Charles Komanoff, a NYC safe-streets activist and mathematician whose traffic modeling has been influential in congestion pricing advocacy, comes in response to last week’s Work-Bites story about labor opposition to the MTA’s congestion pricing plan.
To the Editor:
You reported last week (NYC Unions Reject MTA Congestion Pricing, Call for Ending Stock Transfer Tax Rebate Instead) that most of the 102 unions making up the Municipal Labor Committee were joining the federal lawsuit against the MTA’s congestion pricing (CP) program filed last month by United Federation of Teachers president Michael Mulgrew and Staten Island borough president Vito Fossella.
NYC Unions Reject MTA Congestion Pricing - Call For Ending Stock Transfer Tax Rebate Instead
By Bob Hennelly
A growing coalition of New York City’s unions are speaking out against the Metropolitan Transportation Authority’s plans to impose a congestion pricing fee on vehicles entering Manhattan with several labor leaders suggesting Albany should instead start collecting the state’s Stock Transfer Tax that it has been rebating back to Wall Street since the early 1980s.
NYC Transit Retirees Press Fight to Derail Medicare Advantage Push
By Steve Wishnia
A group of retired New York City transit workers is again seeking a court order to restore their access to traditional Medicare.
The group, TWU100R, is filing an amended petition before State Supreme Court judge Shahabuddeen A. Ally, challenging Transport Workers Union Local 100’s 2023 contract, which eliminated the about 22,000 retirees’ option to keep traditional Medicare. Instead, they were required to enroll in one of two profit-driven Medicare Advantage plans run by Aetna as of January 1. Much like other retirees across the country fighting similar battles, they are arguing that the change illegally diminishes their health-care benefits.
Gov’t Findings Underscore What NYC Transit Workers Have Been Saying…The System is Full of ‘Dead Spots’
By Joe Maniscalco
New preliminary findings recently released by the National Transportation Safety Board looking into January 4’s subway collision on the No. 1 line near the 96th Street station in Manhattan corroborate statements from outspoken Transit workers who tell Work-Bites the system in rife with radio “dead spots.”
NYC Home Health Aides Vow to Launch Hunger Strike Against ‘Inhuman’ 24-Hr Workdays
By Joe Maniscalco
This is gonna be the year the City of New York finally steps up, passes the “No More 24” bill, and ends the round-the-clock workdays steadily grinding home health aides — predominantly older women of color — down to the bone right before everyone’s eyes.
If not, they vow to go on hunger strike to make it happen.
‘Condé Nast Bosses Wear Prada — And the Workers Get Nada!’
By Bob Hennelly
“The bosses wear Prada, and the workers get nada!” chanted hundreds of News Guild CWA workers out on a one-day strike against Conde Nast, the publishing juggernaut that owns iconic titles like Vogue, Vanity Fair, The New Yorker, and Bon Appetite. The boisterous picket line at the base of One World Trade Center in lower Manhattan on a damp day January 24, drew a cacophony of honking horns whizzing by on West Street.
Work-Bites Reader Spotlight: NYC Managers Call for Retroactive Pay Raises, Bonuses…
To the Editor: With the settlement of more than 90% of City labor union contracts, the New York City Managerial Employees Association (NYC MEA) has called on the City to grant similar retroactive across-the-board pay raises and one-time bonuses for City managers. Subject to the New York State Taylor Law, managerial employees cannot unionize and are not bound by collective bargaining contracts.