By Marc Bussanich, LaborPress City Reporter
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Robert Daraio (r.) with Newspaper Guild members Photo by Marc Bussanich |
Robert Daraio, mobilization coordinator with the New York
Newspaper Guild, CWA Local 31003, said that two journalists who write for the
New York Times won the esteemed Pulitzer Prize this year, one for writing a
series about corporate greed.
The bitter irony is, however, that the New York
Times Company wants givebacks from the 1,100 members of the Guild who work as
journalists, editors, photojournalists, digital content producers, and
security guards.
According
to Daraio, the local’s members have been negotiating a new contract with The Times
for over a year. On
Wednesday, April 25 the local held a “dignified silent protest” outside The
Times Center during the annual shareholders meeting to express their concern
over the company’s lack of movement towards forging a new contract.
Daraio
noted some of the contract issues at stake.
“The
company wants to freeze the pension plan and replace it with a 401k plan that
will result in a value loss of one-third to one-half for our members.”
Anthony
Napoli, Business Representative for the Guild represented Times employees, said
the company’s current pension contribution for all 1,110 members is
approximately $10 million dollars per year.
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Guild member outside shareholder meeting. Photo by Marc Bussanich |
“With the 401k option the company wants to
institute, current members with 10 years and over would get a
five percent match from the company, while workers with less than 10 years of
service would get three percent.”
He
also noted that even current workers, for example, with eight years of service
would not get the five percent match after two years, but would continue to
receive only the three percent match.
Daraio
said while the company is seeking a three-year contract with no wage increase
in the first year, a one percent raises in year two and a one percent bonus in
the third year, the union has proposed a five-year contract with a four percent
increase each year.
“Our
members haven’t had been offered serious wage increases in the Times current
proposal. Guild members took a temporary 5% pay cut in 2009 at The Times request to help the company
during financially hard times.”
In
addition to placing more of the burden on the employees to fund their
retirements, the company wants to underfund the health plan. “The company
hasn’t increased contributions to the plan for years,” Daraio said.
He
noted that the industry-standard for health care contributions by employers is
12 percent, but the company contributes only slightly more than six percent.
The union is asking the company to increase the rate to 12 percent over the
life of a five-year contract.
Despite
the request for concessions and givebacks from the union members, “the company
paid out a $24 million severance package in January to a failed CEO, Janet
Robinson,” noted Daraio.
Although
the union does not want its members’ pensions frozen, it is trying to negotiate
a deal with the company that would still allow it to contribute at current
rates.
“We
are willing to work with the company to find ways that helps it reduce its
liability and the plan’s volatility by possibly making changes in investment
strategy or pension formula, but that expertise should be supplied by pension
experts and investment professionals” Daraio said.
Standing with Guild members outside The Times Center
were six members of the Labor Outreach Committee with Occupy Wall Street. A
member of the outreach committee said she was participating in the “dignified
silent protest” with the Newspaper Guild because it’s “99 Percent Pickets” day,
the beginning of the buildup for a massive march and rally on May 1 coordinated
by OWS and the city’s multiple unions.
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