The Times-Picayune
UNION IS TRYING TO WOO CITY
WORKERS IN N.O.
By KRISTEN DELGUZZI and FRANK DONZE Staff writers
August 1, 1998
It has a name, a logo and a budding public-relations campaign,
but, technically, New Orleans Municipal Employees Laborers Union Local No. 661 does not
exist.
For weeks, dozens of city employees have been working behind the
scenes to change that by preaching to their colleagues about the benefits of union
representation. Unless a majority of the city's workers embrace the union, it legally
cannot negotiate or act on behalf of any of them.
The leaders of the unionization effort - along with a local
representative of the Laborers International Union of North America, which would represent
the workers if they decide to organize - have refused to discuss specifics of how the
drive is doing, saying it could be detrimental to their efforts.
Their goal is to have 60 percent of the roughly 5,000 city workers
eligible for representation sign cards recognizing the union by this month, "and
we're tracking very well," Peter A. Fosco, the local representative, said this week.
"The cards keep coming in every single day. When we get a lot closer to our (target)
numbers, I'll start disclosing our numbers."
He said he hopes to have the union in place - either by putting it
to a vote of the workers or by getting the City Council to recognize it - by this fall.
The unionization effort began in earnest about the same time
workers began holding demonstrations in May to draw attention to their low wages. More
than 200 attended an organizing meeting in June, and about two dozen - many from the
city's Finance Department - are actively involved in the campaign.
The campaign will become more visible next week when an open
letter from the unionization leaders is published in local papers.
The letter expresses city workers' "need for living wages,
fair promotions, and better working conditions through a union contract" and cites
statistics from the Civil Service Department showing that more than a third of city
workers earn near or below poverty-level wages.
The letter ends with a telephone number for workers to call to
sign up for union representation and another number for citizens who want to help out.
It's part of what organizer Elias Cottrell III, an administrative
analyst in the Finance Department, calls a "mass education process for
citizens." He said public support is necessary for the union drive and for gaining
pay raises, since Mayor Marc Morial has suggested a voter-approved tax hike may be
necessary to pay for any wage increases.
While Morial has said he supports raises for all city workers and
has endorsed union organizing campaigns at local hotels and Avondale Industries, he has a
different attitude toward the effort to organize city workers.
"I don't have any intentions, right now, of sitting down with
(Fosco) because he's just an organizer," Morial said this week. "He hasn't been
designated to represent anybody."
He said he thinks Fosco has misled city workers by implying that
the union can negotiate on their behalf for higher wages. Under the Louisiana
Constitution, he said, the authority to set salaries rests solely with the city's Civil
Service Commission.
Morial also said he's angry that union leaders chose not to meet
with him, Chief Administrative Officer Marlin Gusman or City Council members before
launching their effort.
"They didn't do that, and that's disappointing," he
said. Fosco "began creating confusion, stirring up confrontation, all in an effort to
get people to sign up and pay dues."
[end]