NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
Rat Goes Splat As Pact Is Signed
By TOM ROBBINS
Daily News Staff Writer
Friday, October 29, 1999
With a loud hiss, a towering 14-foot inflatable rat sank slowly to
the pavement outside a West Side construction site yesterday, marking the end of an often
bitter labor campaign against a nonunion builder.
No need to call the exterminator; these giant rats are history.
For nearly two years, the huge rubber rodent stood at Ninth Ave.
and W. 54th St., flashing its leering, buck-toothed grin across the street, where Roy Kay
Inc. of Freehold, N.J., is building a $33 million rail control center for the Metropolitan
Transportation Authority.
But amid cheers and applause from all sides yesterday, the air was
let out of the rat as the company signed contracts with 15 craft unions - something it had
resisted for years.
Edward Malloy, president of the Building and Construction Trades
Council, said that under the agreement all 200 of Roy Kay's workers will become union
members. The company also agreed to withdraw a federal lawsuit against the unions.
The campaign against Roy Kay Inc. was the biggest effort in recent
years by the building trade unions and included a traffic-snarling protest by 40,000
hardhats in June 1998 outside the MTA's midtown offices.
As he stood outside his work site yesterday, surrounded by some 50
union officials, company owner LeRoy Kay, wearing a blue suit and a large diamond tie pin
with his initials, seemed a little nervous. "I feel good. It's a good day," was
all he said.
"This is a huge victory for the unions and their
members," said Joseph Speziale, business manager of Laborers Local 79.