New York Daily
News
Union Smells Rat
In Pay Flap With Company
By Tom Robbins
March 13, 2000
The renovation of a massive post office building
in lower Manhattan has launched a test of wills between an asbestos contractor and the
union representing asbestos removal workers.
Asbestos Workers Local 78, a division of the
Laborers union, has picketed and deployed the building trades' most popular weapons,
10-foot-tall rubber rats, to protest the practices of AIA Environmental Corp.
The union accuses the firm of routinely paying its
workers late and failing to pay Social Security, workers' compensation and unemployment
taxes.
Workers also complain that they're forced to work
as independent contractors, getting no vacation time or sick days.
"First, they don't pay their workers for
weeks at a time, then they hire them as independent contractors, leaving them completely
unprotected," said Local 78 President Sal Speziale.
Union officials say it's the modus operandi of AIA
owner Emil Braun.
Braun co-owned Asbestos Industries of America, a
defunct firm that operated from the same address in Astoria, Queens. It was barred from
doing state work by the New York State Department of Labor in 1999 for failing to pay
prevailing wages.
In an interview with Working Papers, Braun
admitted being four weeks behind in paying his workers. "We have so many jobs going
on," he said.
Braun also acknowledged that until recently, he
had treated his workers as subcontractors.
"They get their own training and have their
own tools," said Braun. "It seemed to make sense, especially when Mrs. Clinton
was looking to give every employee health insurance through their employer. Somebody could
work for me for three days. It is the nature of the industry."
The union has taken its complaints to the U.S.
Postal Service and Boston Properties, a real estate firm headed by Daily News Chairman
Mortimer Zuckerman, which holds a lease on the building at 90 Church St. and is serving as
construction adviser as the property is converted to office space.
A spokeswoman for the Postal Service said the
agency is mandated to ensure that contractors pay the federal prevailing wage.
"Beyond that, we don't get involved. We are
looking at the cost factor, their ability to deliver within the time frame we are looking
at," said the spokeswoman, Diane Todd.
"Apparently, [the Laborers] are unhappy with
a contract led by the U.S. Postal Service. Their efforts aimed at Boston Properties are
misguided and inappropriate," said Boston Properties Senior Vice President Robert
Selsam.
Workers for the firm said they have little say
about their status.
Richard, 26, who is from Ecuador, said he worked 2
1/2 years for AIA without vacations or sick days and with no deductions taken from his
paycheck. He said he and other non-English speaking workers sign a lengthy document - in
English - in which they declared themselves independent subcontractors. "They told us
if we didn't sign, we would be fired," Richard said through a translator provided by
the union.
Braun denied that anyone was threatened. He also
defended treating his workers as subcontractors, although he said he now makes payroll
deductions
Braun accused the union of waging a pressure
campaign against him after he rebuffed their request that he sign a contract. "I met
with the union people; it was out of central casting, a lot of 'dese' and 'dose' and
things of that nature," said Braun.
Two years ago, he said, the union upped the ante.
"They started picketing my job site with this Mickey Mouse," referring to the
10-foot-tall inflated rodents. Braun said the campaign against him already had cost him
several customers.
E-mail Tom Robbins at
trobbins@edit.nydailynews.com