City Attorney Dennis Herrera filed the complaint with California
labor regulators, accusing the Transport Workers Union of America,
Local 250-A, of orchestrating the sick-out that began on Monday.
Union officials have maintained the workers called in sick
spontaneously and the officials did not tell them to stay home.
The sick-out by workers has hamstrung the San Francisco Municipal
Transportation Agency, whose Muni mass transit system normally sees
about 700,000 passengers board each day. The city's three famed
cable car lines were shut down in the protest because of a lack of
operators.
An estimated 440 drivers showed up to work on Wednesday morning,
compared with about 600 on a typical day, said Paul Rose, a
spokesman for the agency. As a result, over 70 percent of the Muni
bus and train system was in service on Wednesday, compared with half
on Tuesday and a third on Monday.
The sick-out comes after bus and rail operators voted overwhelmingly
on Friday to reject a contract proposal from the transportation
agency.
The offer would increase the minimum base pay for operators to $32
an hour, Rose said. But the union contends the pay increase offered
by the agency in a two-year contract does not adequately compensate
for increased pension contributions the workers have been asked to
make.
Muni workers are prohibited from striking under the terms of their
contract and the city charter.
[to top of second column] |
"The union did not sanction any type of work stoppage sick-out,”
Eric Williams, president of the union, said in response to the
filing of the complaint. "We did not play a role in that."
But Herrera's attorneys, in the charge filed with the California
Public Employment Relations Board, stated that last Wednesday union
leaders discussed a potential sick-out with transit operators in a
meeting.
"During the discussion of the sick-out, TWU leaders failed to
discourage membership from going forward with a sick-out ... or to
inform them that operators engaging in an unauthorized work stoppage
could be subject to discipline, up to and including termination,"
the complaint said.
(Reporting by Alex Dobuzinskis in Los Angeles; Editing by Cynthia
Johnston, Jim Loney and Ken Wills)
[© 2014 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2014 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|