Tag Archives: unions

Elon Musk brands Sweden’s unions ‘insane’ after strikes cripple Tesla operations—but caving to any demands may open the floodgates in the U.S. and Germany – Yahoo Finance

  1. Elon Musk brands Sweden’s unions ‘insane’ after strikes cripple Tesla operations—but caving to any demands may open the floodgates in the U.S. and Germany Yahoo Finance
  2. IF Metall’s anti-Tesla strike is “killing Swedish business:” car workshop owner TESLARATI
  3. Union Action Against Tesla In Sweden Intensifies – Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA) Benzinga
  4. Striking Swedish workers getting under Elon Musk’s skin The Mercury News
  5. Tesla: Pressures mount amid strike in Sweden and pressure wars Yahoo Finance
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Activision Blizzard CEO denies culture of harassment and blames unions for company problems – The Verge

  1. Activision Blizzard CEO denies culture of harassment and blames unions for company problems The Verge
  2. Bobby Kotick Breaks His Silence: Embattled Activision CEO Addresses Toxic Workforce Claims as Microsoft Deal Hangs in Balance Variety
  3. Activision Boss Bobby Kotick Blames ‘Outside Forces’ for Firm’s Poor Reputation Push Square
  4. Activision Blizzard CEO audaciously claims that sexism and harassment problems were made up by an ‘aggressive labor movement’ trying to ‘destabilize the company’ PC Gamer
  5. Activision CEO breaks silence on workplace toxicity GGRecon

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“Your Fight Is Our Fight”: John Leguizamo, Busy Philipps, Tony Kushner and Unions Show Solidarity With WGA – Hollywood Reporter

  1. “Your Fight Is Our Fight”: John Leguizamo, Busy Philipps, Tony Kushner and Unions Show Solidarity With WGA Hollywood Reporter
  2. Dispatches From The Picket Lines, Day 22: 30 Rock Protest Draws Big Names & Huge Crowds In NYC Deadline
  3. Busy Philipps, Cynthia Nixon and Wanda Sykes join Writers Guild strike at Rockefeller Center Daily Mail
  4. Busy Philipps, Al Franken, Ilana Glazer and other stars turn out to support writers strike Gothamist
  5. Dispatches From The WGA Picket Lines, Day 21: ‘American Horror Story’ Targeted In NY As LA Sparks Court Jersey Day Outside WBD Deadline
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Labor unions are split on Chicago mayor candidates as powerful IUOE Local 150 backs Paul Vallas – Chicago Tribune

  1. Labor unions are split on Chicago mayor candidates as powerful IUOE Local 150 backs Paul Vallas Chicago Tribune
  2. Chicago mayoral election 2023: Poll shows tight race between Paul Vallas, Brandon Johnson as runoff election date approaches WLS-TV
  3. Johnson, Vallas Trade Barbs Over Plans For Education, Taxation During Women’s Mayoral Forum Block Club Chicago
  4. Runoff campaign: Vallas’ and Johnson’s pension, property tax plans underwhelm fiscal experts Chicago Sun-Times
  5. Jose Munoz: Runoff candidates have to put in the work to win over Latino voters Chicago Tribune

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French unions call new nationwide strikes, protests Jan. 31

PARIS (AP) — At least 1.1 million people protested on the streets of Paris and other French cities Thursday amid nationwide strikes against plans to raise the retirement age, but President Emmanuel Macron insisted he would press ahead with the proposed pension reforms.

Emboldened by the high turnout, French unions announced new strikes and protests Jan. 31, vowing to try to get the government to back down on plans to raise the standard retirement age from 62 to 64. Macron says the measure is needed to keep the pension system financially viable, but unions say it threatens hard-fought worker rights.

During a news conference at a French-Spanish summit in Barcelona, Spain, Macron said that “we must do that reform” to “save” the pension system.

“We will do it with respect, in a spirit of dialogue but also determination and responsibility,” he added.

As Macron spoke, riot police pushed back against some protesters throwing projectiles on the sidelines of the largely peaceful Paris march. Some other minor incidents briefly flared up, leading officers to use tear gas.

Paris police said that 38 people had been detained.

In a country with an aging population and growing life expectancy where everyone receives a state pension, Macron’s government says the reform is the only way to keep the system solvent.

Unions propose a tax on the wealthy or more payroll contributions from employers to finance the pension system instead. Polls suggest most French people also oppose the reform.

Strikes across France severely disrupted transport, schools and other public services across France.

More than 200 rallies were staged around France on Thursday, including a large one in Paris involving all France’s major unions.

The Interior Ministry said more than 1.1 million people protested across France, including 80,000 in Paris. Unions said more than 2 million people took part nationwide, and 400,000 in Paris.

Big crowds also turned out for protests against previous efforts at retirement reform, during Macron’s first term and under former President Nicolas Sarkozy in 2010. But none of those drew more than 1 million people according to government estimates.

Jean Paul Cachina, 56, a worker in human resources, joined the march in the French capital — a first ever for him.

“I am not here for myself,” he said. “I am here to defend the youth and workers doing demanding jobs. I work in the construction industry sector and I’m a first-hand witness of the suffering of employees.”

Many young people were among the Paris crowd, chanting “the youth is protesting. Macron you are finished.” High school student unions had urged members to join the protests.

Nathan Arsac, 19, a student and member of the UNEF union, said: “I’m afraid of what’s going to happen next. Losing our social achievements could happen so fast. I’m scared of the future when I’ll be older and have to retire.”

Sylvie Béchard, a 59-year-old nurse, said that she joined the march because “we, health care workers, are physically exhausted.”

“The only thing we have is demonstrating and to block the economy of the country,” she added.

The economic cost of the strikes wasn’t immediately clear. The government worries that a big show of resistance Thursday could encourage unions to continue with protracted walkouts that could hobble the economy just as France is struggling against inflation and trying to boost growth.

Police unions opposed to the retirement reform also took part in the protests, while those on duty braced for potential violence should extremist groups join the demonstrations.

Most train services around France were canceled, including some international connections, according to the SNCF rail authority. About 20% of flights out of Paris’ Orly Airport were canceled and airlines warned of delays.

The Ministry of National Education said between 34% and 42% of teachers were on strike, depending on schools.

National electricity company EDF announced that power supplies were substantially reduced Thursday amid the strikes.

Thierry Desassis, a retired teacher, called the government’s plan “an aberration.”

“It’s at 64 that you start having health problems. I’m 68 and in good health but I’ve started seeing doctors more often,” he said.

The strike also affected some monuments. The Versailles Palace was closed Thursday while the Eiffel Tower warned about potential disruptions and the Louvre Museum said some exhibition rooms would remain closed.

Philippe Martinez, secretary general of the hard-left CGT union, urged Macron to “listen to the street.”

Laurent Berger, head of the more moderate CFDT union, called the reform “unfair.”

Many French workers expressed mixed feeling about the government’s plan and pointed to the complexity of the pension system.

Quentin Coelho, 27, a Red Cross employee, felt he had to work Thursday despite understanding “most of the strikers’ demands.” With an aging population in the country, he said, raising the retirement age “isn’t an efficient strategy. If we do it now, the government could decided to raise it further in 30 or 50 years from now. We can’t predict.”

Coelho said he doesn’t trust the government and is already saving money for his pension.

French Labor Minister Olivier Dussopt acknowledged “concerns” prompted by the pension plans but said the government rejected other options involving raising taxes — which he said would hurt the economy and cost jobs — or reducing pensions.

The French government is formally presenting the pension bill on Monday and it will head to Parliament next month. Its success will depend in part on the scale and duration of the strikes and protests.

Most opposition parties, including the left and the far-right, are strongly against the plan. Macron’s centrist alliance lost its parliamentary majority last year, yet still has the most important group at the National Assembly, where it has a good chance of being able to ally with the conservative The Republicans party to approve the pension reforms.

Under the planned changes, workers must have worked for at least 43 years to be entitled to a full pension. For those who do not fulfil that condition, like many women who interrupted their career to raise children or those who studied for a long time and started working late, the retirement age would remain unchanged at 67.

Those who started to work early, under the age of 20, and workers with major health issues would be allowed early retirement.

Protracted strikes met Macron’s last effort to raise the retirement age in 2019. He eventually withdrew it after the COVID-19 pandemic hit.

Retirement rules vary widely from country to country, making direct comparisons difficult. The official retirement age in the U.S. is now 67, and countries across Europe have been raising pension ages as populations grow older and fertility rates drop.

But opponents of Macron’s reform note that, under the French system, people are already required to work more years overall than in some neighboring countries to receive a full pension.

The plan is also seen by many as endangering the welfare state that’s central to French society.

___

Alexander Turnbull contributed to this report.

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Amazon Union’s NYC Victory Certified by Federal Labor Board

(Bloomberg) — A federal regulator has certified an upstart union’s election victory last year at an Amazon.com Inc. facility in New York — a ruling that the company intends to keep fighting.

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In the ruling Wednesday, National Labor Relations Board regional director Cornele Overstreet rejected a slew of objections from the e-commerce company, which has sought to overturn the Amazon Labor Union’s win at a Staten Island site last April.

The Amazon Labor Union won the upset victory among about 8,000 workers at the JFK8 fulfillment center. Amazon had appealed the outcome, arguing that the labor board violated its rules in such a way that it implied a government endorsement of the ALU.

Despite the union’s latest win, the battle with Amazon isn’t over. The Seattle-based company can now appeal the ruling to labor board members in Washington, where Democrats hold a majority. If it loses that appeal, it could simply refuse to negotiate with the union, setting in motion another series of complaints and appeals that could take months or years to play out.

“We’re ecstatic right now,” ALU interim President Chris Smalls said Wednesday. “This is very historic for workers.”

The ALU leader urged Amazon to start negotiating with the union, as the regional director’s order requires. “If they’re a good company, and in good faith, and they listen to their workers, and their workers are asking them to come to the table, then they should come to the table,” he said. “But that’s still to be determined. Whatever move they make, we’ll have a move to make as a counter.”

In a statement, Amazon said it plans to appeal. “As we’ve said since the beginning, we don’t believe this election process was fair, legitimate or representative of the majority of what our team wants,” the company said.

Even without a collective bargaining agreement, official certification provides workers with protections like the ability to bring a witness to meetings that could lead to discipline, and restricts the company from unilaterally changing working conditions, ALU attorney Seth Goldstein said.

The Amazon Labor Union — a grassroots effort co-founded by Smalls, a fired employee — has lost some momentum since the Staten Island win. The group was defeated in two subsequent elections by wide margins, one at a smaller facility across the street from the original warehouse, and a second one at a site outside Albany, New York.

The Retail, Wholesale and Department Store Union, meanwhile, is seeking to represent workers at an Amazon warehouse in Bessemer, Alabama. Federal officials determined that Amazon’s conduct during a vote there in 2021 made a fair election impossible, but a rerun election hinges on contested ballots.

–With assistance from Spencer Soper.

(Updates with Amazon comment in seventh paragraph.)

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Macron, unions head for French pension reform showdown

  • Retirement age set to be raised to 64 from 62
  • Unions, left-wing opposition reject the reform
  • Adoption in parliament depends on the right

PARIS, Jan 10 (Reuters) – The French should work two years longer to age 64 before retiring, the government said on Tuesday, announcing an unpopular pension system overhaul that immediately prompted unions to call for strikes and protests.

The right to retire at a relatively young age is deeply cherished in France and the reform will be a major test of President Emmanuel Macron’s ability to deliver change as social discontent mounts over the cost of living.

The reform’s passage through parliament will not be easy. Macron’s government says it is vital to keep the pension budget out of the red. Unions argue the reform is unfair and unnecessary.

“Nothing justifies such a brutal reform,” Laurent Berger, leader of the moderate, reform-minded CFDT union, told reporters after trade union leaders agreed on a nationwide strike for Jan. 19, which will kick off a series of strikes and protests.

An Odoxa poll showed four out of five citizens oppose the higher retirement age.

“I’m well aware that changing our pension system raises questions and fears among the French,” Prime Minister Elisabeth Borne had told a news conference shortly before.

“We offer today a project to balance our pension system, a project that is fair,” she said, adding that France had to face reality.

Overhauling the pension system was a central pillar of Macron’s reformist agenda when he entered the Elysee Palace in 2017. But he shelved his first attempt in 2020 as the government battled to contain COVID-19.

The second attempt will not be any easier.

“It’s one slap in the face after another,” said 56-year-old Frederic Perdriel during a small protest in the western city of Rennes ahead of Borne’s announcement. “There are other ways to finance pensions than raising the retirement age.”

“BRUTAL, CRUEL”

Macron and Borne will need to win support among conservative Les Republicains (LR) lawmakers in the coming months to pass the reform in parliament.

That looks less challenging than it did a few weeks ago after concessions on the retirement age – Macron had originally wanted it to be 65 – and a minimum pension.

Olivier Marleix, who leads the LR group in the lower house of parliament, reacted positively to Borne’s announcements.

“They heard us,” he said, while asking for more efforts to ensure employment for people close to retirement age.

Even so, LR is divided on the issue, so every vote counts.

The Socialists, the hard-left La France Insoumise (France Unbowed) and the far-right’s National Rally were swift to denounce the reform. Left-wing lawmaker Mathilde Panot branded the plan “archaic, unfair, brutal, cruel.”

“The French can count on our determination to block this unfair reform,” the far-right’s Marine Le Pen said.

Under the government plan, the retirement age will be raised by three months per year from September, reaching the target age of 64 in 2030.

From 2027, eight years earlier than planned in past reforms, it will be necessary to have worked 43 years to receive a full pension.

Other measures aim to boost the employment rate among 60 to 64-year-olds, which is one of the lowest among leading industrialised nations.

With one of the lowest retirement ages in the industrialised world, France also spends more than most countries on pensions at nearly 14% of economic output, according to the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development.

Reporting by Elizabeth Pineau, Leigh Thomas, Stephane Mahe, Tassilo Hummel, Blandine Henault; writing by Ingrid Melander; editing by Richard Lough, Alexandra Hudson and Josie Kao

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Judge halts California fast-food law as restaurants, unions hammer each other

A judge of the Sacramento Superior Court ruled Friday to block a proposed law in California that would give the state authority to negotiate the wages and working conditions of fast-food workers.

The block is dependent on the outcome of a proposed referendum pushed by fast-food giants to stomp out the proposed changes.

The Fast Food Accountability and Standards Recovery Act (“FAST”) has seen significant pushback from restaurateurs and franchisees as workers’ unions fight to give the state a seat at the table in negotiating wages.

FAST-FOOD FRANCHISEES SAY CALIFORNIA’S AB 257 COULD INCREASE COSTS, UNDERMINE BUSINESS MODEL

A sign is posted in front of a McDonald’s restaurant on April 28, 2022, in San Leandro, California.  (Justin Sullivan/Getty Images / Getty Images)

The law would establish a 10-member council capable of setting minimum wages and parameters for work hours at fast-food restaurants within the state. 

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Restaurant industry interest groups are seeking a November 2024 referendum to kill the legislation.

MCDONALD’S USA PRESIDENT JOE ERLINGER CRITICIZES CALIFORNIA FAST-FOOD WORKERS BILL

California Gov. Gavin Newsom angrily denounced the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision to overturn Roe v. Wade, during a news conference in Sacramento, Calif., Friday, June 24, 2022. (AP Photo/Rich Pedroncelli / AP Newsroom)

Election officials have not yet finished counting the signatures on the referendum proposal, but if a sufficient amount are counted, the court’s ruling will halt the law from taking effect until Californians can weigh in.

California’s Department of Industrial Relations will begin setting the law into motion on Sunday pending a successful reform petition. However, concrete negotiation of wages will likely not begin until late next year.

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The Service Employees International Union was a key champion of the legislation.

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The union has accused McDonald’s, Chipotle and other chains by name as disregarding workers’ well-being for the sake of business considerations.

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Rail unions warn of election consequences with labor deal in Senate

Leaders of the rail labor unions that have voted not to ratify the tentative labor deal tell CNBC that as the Senate moves closer to a vote on Thursday afternoon on legislation to prevent a rail strike, senators need to realize this is a humanitarian issue and their members will not forget who supported them. The three unions, the Brotherhood of Railroad Signalmen (BRS), SMART-TD, and Brotherhood of Maintenance Way Employees Division represent more than half of all railroad labor.

“Our membership is going to support whoever stands with them,” said Tony Cardwell, president of the Brotherhood of Maintenance Way Employees Division. “It’s looking like the Democrats are standing with our members and making sure that our members get sick leave. If that’s the case, we will. If Republicans are bold enough to step out, stand with labor, stand with the blue-collar workers, and vote with our members, then it’s likely that they can gain votes as well.”

On Wednesday, the House passed the tentative rail labor agreement and additional legislation to add seven paid sick days, which has been one of the most important issues to rail workers in the breakdown of negotiations with freight rail companies.

All three union presidents say they understand why President Biden had to push Congress to pass the tentative agreement. But Cardwell said, “We hope that he stands by us on sick pay and that he’s pushing the Senate to vote for the sick leave proposal that’s on the floor.” 

U.S. President Joe Biden greets negotiators who brokered the railway labor agreement after U.S. railroads and unions secured a tentative deal to avert a rail shutdown, in the Oval Office at the White House in Washington, September 15, 2022.

Kevin Lamarque | Reuters

Senate leaders said they were moving closer to voting on the deal on Thursday afternoon, covering amendments for a 60-day extension of the cooling-off period and seven days of paid sick leave, and the House-passed underlying tentative agreement, though it was not clear if votes were there for passage of the amendments.

“This is a humanitarian issue,” said Michael Baldwin, president of the Brotherhood of Railroad Signalmen, said. “People throughout the country have employers who pay them sick time. We have our employer, the railroads paying management paid sick days, and you can’t come to the table and bargain with your rank and file for the same? It just doesn’t make any sense.”

Some members of the House have called the addition of sick pay a gimmick or poison pill. Cardwell noted that 80% of American workers have sick leave, including Congress. “They (Congress) have it, their staffers have it. Many government employees have it. Most corporations provide some form of sick leave for their employees. So I find it completely irritating that they would call it a gimmick,” he said.

Jeremy Ferguson, president of SMART-TD added, “It’s time for the Senate to say, let’s put these union workers in a good place where there is sick pay, so in the event that we have another pandemic or whatever the case may be, so we can keep the supply chain moving and do it adequately.”

The railroads and the Biden administration have focused on the significant wage increases included in the deal. But Ferguson said it should not be an either/or. “We were not interested in trading away any of the general wage increases … Cost of living and where everything else is at, including record profits for big rail, they can afford seven or five extra sick days a year without us having to give that up out of our daily earnings,” he said.

Biden’s PEB deal ‘missed the mark’

Ferguson said the Presidential Emergency Board rail labor deal “missed a few marks and sidestepped a few, mainly our attendance policy issues.”

He said those issues are a result of precision scheduled railroading, a model that more Class I freight rails adopted in recent years to improve their efficiency and cut costs, and which has been scrutinized by both unions and government agencies.

“The railroads tighten the attendance policies down to such drastic measures that we have members that are only getting one day off a month where they used to get five or six. And then you know, they (the PEB) also passed on the sick days,” Baldwin said.

The three union presidents all said they raised paid sick time as an issue during negotiations, pushing back against comments made by Association of American Railroads (AAR) president and CEO Ian Jefferies, who told reporters after Biden urged Congress to avert a strike, “If the unions are interested in a holistic discussion for structural changes as it relates to their sick time, I think absolutely the railroad carriers would be up for a holistic discussion but [they] have not done it.”

Brendan Branon, National Railway Labor Conference chairman, recently told CNBC the future of collective bargaining is in the hands of Congress and urged that the legislation follows the recommendations of the PEB, a board created by Biden in July to resolve the ongoing dispute between major freight rail carriers and their unions. The board crafts its recommendations under a principle known as pattern bargaining, which is a collective bargaining principle used to promote settlement of disputes.

Now that 8 of the 12 unions have ratified the agreement, what is known as a “pattern” has been established. In this case, railroads argue that the pattern of unions approving tentative agreements based upon the PEB, that is the only acceptable path to resolution.

“Pattern bargaining promotes stability in collective bargaining, and it encourages settlement,” Branon said. “There’s any number of arbitrators and PEBs who have recognized that this is not only acceptable, this is the most appropriate form to settle complex negotiations, especially multi-employer, multi-craft agreements,” he added.

Cardwell strongly disagreed with this assessment.

“Of course, we try to stick to the recommendations. But when they aren’t satisfactory on either side, both parties have made arguments … That’s the point of negotiations. The PEB recommendations are just that, recommendations that are not binding. The PEB is not the negotiator. We are. And it’s the parties’ job to come together on these issues. Not the PEB.”

Precision railroading needs to be addressed

After the House passed the tentative agreement and additional legislation to add the seven paid sick days, SMART-TD released a statement saying Congress also needs to take a look at precision railroading.

But Ferguson said this would not be asked of Congress in this agreement.

“There’s a lot of work to be done to correct precision scheduled railroading,” Ferguson said. “Instead of trying to run 10,000-foot trains every six hours, they would rather run a 20,000-foot train every 12 hours. So they can save on crews and they can save on locomotives, but they don’t recognize the fact that the infrastructure will not accommodate a train that is four miles long. And that bogs down the rest of the supply chain all the way from LA to Chicago or wherever it’s going.”

“They will tell the government otherwise, but we’re the ones running the trains every day we can say so. That is part of precision scheduled railroading, run longer, with less crews and less locomotives,” he said.

Supply chain congestion and rail embargoes

The unions argue that precision railroading and the lack of labor are the reasons behind congestion in the supply chain. The Surface and Transportation Board is calling Union Pacific management including CEO Lance Fritz to appear at hearings December 13-14 about the freight railroad’s use of embargoes.

The STB, an independent federal agency with oversight of surface transportation, wants to question Fritz and other Union Pacific top executives about UP’s increased use of embargoes that the regulatory body characterizes as “substantial.”

According to STB data, UP’s use of embargoes to control congestion has increased from a total of five in 2017 to more than 1,000 to date in 2022. The agency said it has received numerous reports that the embargoes are hampering shippers’ operations and adding to supply chain problems.

UP carries nearly 27 percent of freight served by rail and nearly 11 percent of all long-distance freight volume. 

Union Pacific said in a recent statement to CNBC that due to its geographic span, number of yards, customer facilities, and commodity mix, “embargoes are one of the few tools, and last steps, to manage and meter customer-controlled railcar inventory levels, helping alleviate network congestion.”

“I have all the confidence in the chairman of the STB, [Marty Overman] that he will question them adequately, he will drill down and get the facts and find out the reasons for all these embargoes,” Ferguson said. “But I know that the end result is going to be once again precision scheduled railroading and the operating ratios for the quarter trying to achieve better results every chance that you get.”

“When Marty gets into this, I’m sure he’s gonna say that they do not have adequate staffing levels, contrary to what they have reported that they’ve been trying to do. They haven’t kept up with the rate of attrition. And it’s going to go to show when these facts come out here,” Ferguson said.

Correction: This story has been updated to properly attribute a quote on the Presidential Emergency Board to Jeremy Ferguson, president of SMART-TD.

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House votes to avert rail strike, impose deal on unions

WASHINGTON (AP) — The U.S. House moved urgently to head off the looming nationwide rail strike on Wednesday, passing a bill that would bind companies and workers to a proposed settlement that was reached in September but rejected by some of the 12 unions involved.

The measure passed by a vote of 290-137 and now heads to the Senate. If approved there, it will be signed by President Joe Biden, who urged the Senate to act swiftly.

“Without the certainty of a final vote to avoid a shutdown this week, railroads will begin to halt the movement of critical materials like chemicals to clean our drinking water as soon as this weekend,” Biden said. “Let me say that again: without action this week, disruptions to our auto supply chains, our ability to move food to tables, and our ability to remove hazardous waste from gasoline refineries will begin.”

Business groups including the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and the American Farm Bureau Federation have warned that halting rail service would cause a devastating $2 billion per day hit to the economy.

The bill would impose a compromise labor agreement brokered by the Biden administration that was ultimately voted down by four of the 12 unions representing roughly 115,000 employees at large freight railroads. The unions have threatened to strike if an agreement can’t be reached before a Dec. 9 deadline.

Lawmakers from both parties expressed reservations about overriding the negotiations. And the intervention was particularly difficult for Democratic lawmakers who have traditionally sought to align themselves with the politically powerful labor unions that criticized Biden’s move to intervene in the contract dispute and block a strike.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi responded to that concern by adding a second vote Wednesday that would add seven days of paid sick leave per year for rail workers covered under the agreement. However, it will take effect only if the Senate goes along and passes both measures. The House passed the sick leave measure as well, but by a much narrower margin, 221-207, as Republicans overwhelmingly opposed it, indicating that prospects for passage of the add-on are slim in the evenly divided Senate.

Business groups and the Association of American Railroads trade association praised the House vote to block the strike but urged senators to resist adding sick time to the deal.

“Unless Congress wants to become the de facto endgame for future negotiations, any effort to put its thumb on the bargaining scale to artificially advantage either party, or otherwise obstruct a swift resolution, would be wholly irresponsible,” said Ian Jefferies, head of the AAR.

On the other hand, the Transportation Trades Department labor coalition that includes all the rail unions praised the vote to add sick time and told lawmakers who voted against it they had “abandoned your working class constituents.”

The call for more paid sick leave was a major sticking point in the talks along with other quality-of-life concerns. The railroads say the unions have agreed in negotiations over the decades to forgo paid sick time in favor of higher wages and strong short-term disability benefits.

Jefferies said Tuesday that railroads would consider adding paid sick time in the future, but said that change should wait for a new round of negotiations instead of being added now, near the end of three years of contract talks.

The unions maintain that railroads can easily afford to add paid sick time at a time when they are recording record profits. Several of the big railroads involved in these contract talks reported more than $1 billion profit in the third quarter.

“Quite frankly, the fact that paid leave is not part of the final agreement between railroads and labor is, in my opinion, obscene,” said Rep. Jim McGovern, D-Mass. “It should be there and I hope it will be there at the end of this process.”

Most rail workers don’t receive any paid sick time, but they do have short-term disability benefits that kick in after as little as four days and can replace some of their income for a year or more. Rail workers also receive vacation and personal leave days, but workers say it’s difficult to use those for illnesses because they must typically be approved far ahead of time.

Republicans also voiced support for the measure to block the strike, but criticized the Biden administration for turning to Congress to “step in to fix the mess.”

“They’ve retreated in failure and they kicked this problem to Congress for us to decide,” said Rep. Sam Graves, R-Mo.

Republicans criticized Pelosi’s decision to add the sick leave bill to the mix. They said the Biden administration’s own special board of arbitrators recommended higher wages to compensate the unions for not including sick time in its recommendations.

“Why do we even have the system set up the way it is if Congress is going to come in and make changes to all of the recommendations?” Graves said.

Pelosi sought to position Democrats and the Biden administration as defenders of unions and slammed the rail companies, saying they’ve slashed jobs, increased worker hours and cut corners on safety. But she said Congress needed to intervene.

“Families wouldn’t be able to buy groceries or life-saving medications because it would be even more expensive and perishable goods would spoil before reaching shelves,” Pelosi said.

The compromise agreement that was supported by the railroads and a majority of the unions provides for 24% raises and $5,000 in bonuses retroactive to 2020 along with one additional paid leave day. The raises would be the biggest rail workers have received in more than four decades. Workers would have to pay a larger share of their health insurance costs, but their premiums would be capped at 15% of the total cost of the insurance plan. The agreement did not resolve workers’ concerns about schedules that make it hard to take a day off and the lack of more paid sick time.

On several past occasions, Congress has intervened in labor disputes by enacting legislation to delay or prohibit railway and airline strikes.

___

Funk reported from Omaha, Nebraska.

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