The Plain Dealer
Cleveland, OH
Blacks Win Appeal Of Perry Hiring
Suit
By Susan Jaffe Plain Dealer Reporter
May 1, 1999
NORTH PERRY:Black workers denied construction
jobs at the Perry nuclear power plant have won a 15-year-old
discrimination suit.
The 6th Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals in Cincinnati yesterday
upheld a lower court ruling that the Laborers International Union of North America and its
Madison-based Local 496 discriminated against the workers.
The union ran a hiring hall that was responsible for sending
workers to Perry to build the plant. Donald "Nick" Robinson of Painesville was
one of the few blacks working at the site. He also served as a union steward. New workers
had to report to him. "After a year, when I didn't see any blacks coming for the
jobs, I thought something was wrong," he said. "I complained to the union."
He said white workers with no experience or union membership were
hired while blacks were told they had to join the union. The union told the black
applicants they couldn't join unless they had a job. The situation was "a Catch-22;
they couldn't win," Robinson said.
Floyd Conrad, the Laborers union business manager, and attorneys
representing the union did not return messages late yesterday. "I can remember
putting a guy to work who came right out of high school, with no experience, when there
were dozens of blacks who couldn't get a job," Robinson said. "That's what upset
me."
In 1982, Robinson filed a complaint with the U. S. Equal
Employment Opportunity Commission on behalf of 14 workers denied jobs. The complaint
became the basis of the suit, which was filed in 1984.
Conrad testified that his union did not refer a single black
nonunion member for Perry employment, even though the union promised in its contract to
refer both members and nonmembers. His testimony came at the trial in U.S. District Court
in Cleveland. Also, white relatives of Local 496 members frequently were given breaks in
applying for the jobs, he said.
In June 1996, U.S. District Judge Kathleen O'Malley approved a
settlement under which Local 496 agreed to pay $100,000 and its parent union $200,000 to
the plaintiffs. The unions agreed Local 496 would give blacks preference in referrals for
jobs.
On appeal, Local 496 questioned O'Malley's reasoning in siding
with the plaintiffs. Judges R. Guy Cole Jr. and Damon Keith upheld O'Malley's finding.
Judge Alice Batchelder dissented, saying she saw no reason to hold the parent union liable
for Local 496's actions.
The Perry plant began operating in 1987 and was owned by the
Cleveland Electric Illuminating Co., which became part of the FirstEnergy Corp. last year.
FirstEnergy spokesman Todd Schneider denied that racial discrimination took place during
construction. "I'm sure no one was aware of that," he said. "That would
violate the EEOC as well as our own internal policy."
Information from the Associated Press was used in this article
Copyright The Plain Dealer 1999