PITTSBURGH TRIBUNE-REVIEW
Expert: New Leadership Would Help
Boost Union
By David Conti
March 29, 2000
Members of a Pittsburgh labor union allegedly controlled by the
mob could win better contracts and a measure of democracy if the international union
succeeds in replacing the leadership, an expert and a union lawyer said.
"It all depends on how the local's membership perceives the
move," James Craft, a professor of business administration at the University of
Pittsburgh, said Tuesday. "They may feel they don't have a fair shot in elections and
may be more than happy to see this."
An attorney for the Laborer's International Union of North America
said local control has been re-established within 18 months at most of the 40 locals taken
over by trustees, and smoother operations are in place at all of them.
"There has been no place we've gone that it hasn't been
considerably better when we left," Robert Luskin said.
When a trusteeship was granted for the union's Chicago District
Council in February 1998, the results were immediately beneficial, Luskin said.
"They got the best labor agreement they've ever had in
Chicago," he said.
That example could be particularly important to the members of
Local 1058 of the Construction, General Laborers and Material Handlers in Pittsburgh.
Allegheny County Manager Robert Webb said more than 1,100 of the
local's 3,500 members are employed in the county's Department of Public Works and at Kane
Regional Hospitals.
Their contracts are up for negotiation this year.
If a trustee is appointed - a matter to be decided in the next few
months by an arbitrator - Craft said that person's ability to secure a good contract could
dictate how much support he or she gets from the local membership.
"Contract time is always the exciting time, when everybody's
interested in what's going on," he said. "If the trustee comes back with more
money for the members, it can only be positive in their eyes."
The U.S. Department of Justice has been monitoring the
international union's nationwide attempts to rid local operations of corruption and ties
to organized crime and in January lauded the union's success in that area.
In Pittsburgh, the involvement of the Justice Department is
somewhat indirect, as no officers or executive board members face any criminal charges.
Luskin claims Local 1058 has been controlled by the mob since the
1960s, when Pittsburgh crime boss John S. Larocca Sr. appointed its leaders. In a written
complaint, Luskin asserted that all leaders since then have been similarly chosen by Mafia
leaders and face no opposition during local elections.
In a written statement, Local 1058 denied the allegations and
accused Luskin of " ... attempting to override the will of the union membership by
removing Local 1058's duly elected officers."
The local's leaders and lawyers have declined further comment.