New York Post
CONSTRUCTION WORKERS STRIKE:
MIDTOWN SHUT DOWN!!!
UNION MOBS STREETS IN VIOLENT PROTEST
By TRACY CONNOR
June 30, 1998
Some 40,000 screaming construction workers staged a raucous
demonstration that exploded in violence and paralyzed Midtown Manhattan yesterday -
catching city officials flat-footed. "The union leaders changed the location and way
underestimated the numbers," Mayor Giuliani fumed. "They told us at maximum they
expected 10,000. We were prepared for 15,000. Our estimate is that ... 40,000 showed up
... What they did was totally unacceptable."
Eighteen cops were injured, none seriously, in a series of clashes
with angry protesters, who hurled bottles and rushed barricades. Three demonstrators,
including a union member who was trampled by a police horse, also were hurt in the melee.
Some were hit with pepper spray by police.
Thirty-two demonstrators were arrested.
The Building Trades Council scheduled the demonstration to protest
the Metropolitan Transportation Authority's awarding of a $33 million contract to Roy Kay
Inc., which uses non union workers. Charges included disorderly conduct, assaulting police
officers, and riot - plus one charge of hitting a police horse, officials said. A Daily
News photographer was arrested for allegedly violating police orders, but the charges were
later dismissed "in the interest of media relations," an NYPD spokeswoman said.
The city vowed to prosecute the arrested unionists and said it
will subpoena TV camera footage to identify other rioters. It also plans to sue the
organizers of the march for damages and seek an injunction to limit future protests, said
Giuliani, who canceled a trip upstate after rowdy builders rampaged across major
thoroughfares during a five-hour demonstration.
The NYPD issued a permit for 10,000 workers and deployed 550 cops
to keep order at the MTA headquarters on Madison Avenue and 45th Street. The crowd quickly
swelled far beyond the original estimate as union job sites across the city shut down,
freeing workers to join the protest.
The chanting, flag-waving demonstrators ignored police
instructions to disperse and some began throwing bottles and umbrellas as cops tried to
contain the crowd, police said "It was supposed to be peaceful, but it turned into
"Let's see how many blocks we can close,'" one beleaguered cop said. The group
took over Sixth Avenue and other major streets on a crosstown trek to the MTA job site on
Ninth Avenue, bringing traffic to a standstill.
The NYPD called in 450 reinforcements - including mounted cops and
helicopters, officials said. "The police acted very, very quickly and swiftly to get
the requisite number of police officers there, given the fact they were surprised by
this," Giuliani said. "The whole group never got out of control. Although the
Police Department was playing catch-up, they always kept it within at least some degree of
bounds."
Police Commissioner Howard Safir downplayed the violence and said
the NYPD is always prepared for protests of any size. "There were some scattered
incidents and some minor violence," he said. "Generally, it was a pretty
well-behaved crowd."
As the protesters marched from MTA headquarters to Ninth Avenue
and 53rd Street and back, there were several ugly, chaotic confrontations with police. The
most serious erupted when cops struggled to keep the mob away from the non-union work site
and used pepper spray to keep the crowd at bay. Groups of workers - some of whom made pit
stops in local bars and carried beer bottles through the streets - also attacked an MTA
truck and two vehicles they suspected were doing non-union work.
Safir said there were no early indications of trouble. "The
demonstrators were acting in an orderly manner. Then suddenly there appeared to be a
change in their demeanor. I don't know what triggered it, if anything," he said.
Defending their own actions, union officials condemned the
violence and vandalism. "If it happened, it was wrong. We don't condone it,"
Paul Fernandes, assistant to the president of the Building Trades Council, said of the
violence. "But I would point out 99.9 percent of the people behaved themselves."
Fernandes said the council told the NYPD it expected "at
least" 10,000 protesters and cautioned officials they were shutting down all
construction projects in the city, he said. "We didn't intentionally underestimate
the size of the crowd," Fernandes said. "It's very hard to get into the mind of
our membership."
Protesters said they needed strength in numbers to show they won't
tolerate non-union contracts. "The city will crumble if we allow non-union workers at
sites. They're unqualified. Their work is shoddy," said Kevin Regan, 41, a plumber.
"The city has been infested by these non-union workers, and Kay is the biggest
roach."
Stanley Kopilow, a lawyer for the charged protesters, called the
arrests "an overreaction." "It's really unfortunate that people in 1998
have to protest on the streets to be able to work with dignity. This is not about crime -
it's about working with dignity." Some protesters claimed the NYPD inflamed tensions
by sending cops in riot gear to keep the peace. "They tried to intimidate us, but
we're not going to be intimidated," said steelworker John Rodriguez, 32. "I
think they panicked." But cops said they were trying to keep a bad situation from
getting worse. "They sprayed us with pepper spray. They were throwing bottles. We
were just doing our job. Stop blaming us," one officer said.
Copyright (c) 1998, N.Y.P. Holdings, Inc.