Razzle
Dazzle
Bum-Rushing
Democracy
By RICHARD STEIER
Those
entering John Adams High School July 18 for the vote on Amalgamated Transit
Union Local 1181's tentative contract for school bus employees were greeted by a
wall sign proclaiming, "Welcome Back to School." Any thought that the message
was premature was banished by the ensuing proceedings in the school auditorium,
where Local 1181 President Sal Battaglia conducted a seminar in subverting
democracy.
The agreement with school bus companies had actually been reached 13 days
earlier, but neither side had disclosed details other than that the accord did
not include any givebacks by the union. Local 1181 officials had ignored a
request by a dissident faction of the union, Members for Change, to send members
a rundown of the deal's provisions, arguing that it was traditional to wait
until the meeting where the vote was held.
Less-Honorable Traditions
Of course, if you believe Federal prosecutors, it has also been a union
tradition for at least the past three decades to serve as a cash cow for the
Genovese crime family, whose boss, Matty "The Horse" Ianniello, has reputedly
exercised control over the union and its benefit funds through its longtime
secretary-treasurer, Julius "Spike" Bernstein.
Mr. Bernstein was recently forced to take a leave from his position as a
condition of his making bail after he took his second Federal pinch in 11
months, this one for allegedly shaking down a bus company owner to ensure that
his company wasn't unionized. An indictment brought a year ago accuses Mr.
Bernstein, Mr. Battaglia and Mr. Bernstein's girlfriend, Local 1181 Recording
Secretary Ann Chiarovano, of being part of a racketeering conspiracy with Mr.
Ianniello and other ranking members of his crime family.
Disseminating the contract's terms beforehand ordinarily might have been
helpful in speeding the meeting along, a definite priority given the sweltering
heat inside John Adams's un-air-conditioned auditorium. One supporter of Mr.
Battaglia's regime seated toward the back several times murmured, "Keep it short
and sweet, Sal," even though she, like virtually all the other 400 people
inside, had yet to learn any of the pact's details.
The Local 1181 president obliged. After beginning the meeting with a
recitation of "The Pledge of Allegiance," he whipped through the contract's
details while offering commentary on the tenor of negotiations, a critique of
the recent newspaper coverage of the contract talks ("Don't believe what you
read in The Times or the other rag papers"), and conducting a vote, taking
barely a half-hour for the entire production. It was a breath-taking
performance, for reasons that had nothing to do with the stifling heat.
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The Chief-Leader/Michael
O'Kane
WAITED FOR TURN THAT NEVER
CAME: Gloria Flaherty, handing out leaflets against the contract
process used by Amalgamated Transit Union Local 1181, lamented later
that union President Sal Battaglia had promised dissidents the
opportunity to voice their objections but then pushed through the
ratification vote without allowing any discussion.
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One of the
more remarkable aspects of it was that the ATU International, stung by recent
criticism of its failure to act against the union's leadership in the wake of
the racketeering indictments (the trial of Mr. Battaglia, Mr. Bernstein, Ms.
Chiarovano and Mr. Ianniello and his friends is slated for September), was
finally moved after Mr. Bernstein's latest indictment to dispatch one of its
vice presidents to monitor Local 1181's operations.
That vice president, Joseph Welch, was on stage and introduced to the crowd
by Mr. Battaglia. He soon made clear that he was there strictly as an observer,
looking on with no visible response as attempts were made by the dissidents to
voice their dissatisfaction with the process.
When Raymond LaRoche, one of the more outspoken dissidents, sought to protest
the lack of any prior examination of the deal's terms, and the failure to give
members at the meeting any kind of fact sheet, Mr. Battaglia responded by saying
he would get his chance to speak later.
Raises Delayed 6 Months
The Local 1181 president then began running through the contract. His
presentation was not the best-organized - he began detailing provisions
affecting only the mechanics among the 8,400 employees affected before talking
about the raises: 3 percent effective next Jan. 1, and then 4 percent and 3.5
percent at the beginning of each of the following two years.
Mr. Battaglia stated that the raises were in line with those granted by the
Metropolitan Transportation Authority to two ATU locals representing city bus
personnel in Queens and Staten Island; what he didn't mention was that those
hikes came at the beginning of each contract year while the Local 1181 raises
are paid six months into each year of their deal, which runs through July 1,
2009.
Local 1181 members will wind up with the same salary at the end of the
contract as if the raises were paid at the start of each contract year, but they
will lose a significant amount of cash because of the six-month delays in
implementation.
A bus driver making the maximum salary of $50,908 under the old contract
would get $763 less in cash during the new deal's first year, $1,049 less in the
second year and $954 less in the final year, for a total of $2,766 below what he
or she would have received if each raise was effective on the first day of each
contract year.
Pension Upgrades
Mr. Battaglia announced that the bus owners had agreed to increase their
weekly per-member pension contributions by $4 in each of the first two years of
the deal and by $3 in its final year, with employees required to pay $2 more the
first two years and $1.50 more at the start of the third year. Service credit
for pensions would be counted through 40 years, compared to the old maximum of
35, and next March the Local 1181 board will decide how much pension allowances
should be increased. "I can tell you this: you will get a decent raise, well
overdue," Mr. Battaglia said to the cheers of many in the crowd.
There were times when the enthusiasm seemed manufactured, as when one union
member gave a lusty bellow of approval at Mr. Battaglia's announcement that bus
drivers who maintained good records would have their annual safety bonus
increased from $75 to $100. It had been clear from the outset, however, that the
union leadership had done a better job than Members for Change of turning out
its supporters. Although nearly three-quarters of the local's membership is
black and Latino, a clear majority of those in attendance were white.
At the beginning of the meeting, Mr. Battaglia had called the contract "a
bittersweet victory." He now said that he had been referring to the negotiations
over health benefits, raising a question as to whether the union had in fact
been forced to make some concession in that area, just as the other ATU locals
were compelled to have their members contribute 1.5 percent of their earnings
toward their health insurance premiums.
A Lie of Omission
"They were very adamant about getting the 1.5 contributions from every
member," Mr. Battaglia told the crowd. He then delivered what appeared to be the
sweetest news about the deal: "There will be no contributions for your
health-care benefits." And although by his estimate health-care costs have risen
over the past few years by between 14 and 18 percent, "As of this day there will
be no raise in your deductibles."
There was a significant omission in Mr. Battaglia's presentation on the
issue, however, and it was tipped off by his use of the phrase, "As of this
day," in talking about an increase in deductibles.
Limit Owners' Payments
To provide savings beyond those generated by the six-month delay in each pay
raise to keep the cost of the contract in line with those that ATU Locals 726
and 1056 reached with the MTA, Local 1181 was forced to agree to a fixed
management contribution for health-care benefits in each year of the contract.
According to the chief negotiator for the bus owners, Jeffrey Pollack, the
contribution rate will be set at $748 per member in the first year of the deal
and rise to $838 in the second year and $939 for the third.
If health-care usage by Local 1181 members exceeded the amount contributed,
it would be the union's responsibility to deal with it, either by reducing
benefit levels or increasing member co-pays.
Instead, he concluded his presentation by telling the crowd that the local's
board unanimously recommended approval of the deal. "We had no strike, no
interruption of service," Mr. Battaglia said. "I think we did one helluva good
job. We did not give back anything."
Blocks Debate
He asked for a motion to put the contract to a vote, and Mr. LaRoche and
other dissidents called out for a chance to discuss the contract. Mr. Battaglia
replied that this wasn't the point at which to raise that issue; that all he was
asking for was a vote on the motion, not an actual contract vote.
Most of those present stood up to show their support for the motion; only
about 20 persons stood up to oppose it.
At that point, Mr. Battaglia moved for a vote on the contract, without
further discussion, despite the protests of the dissidents, and the deal was
quickly ratified and the meeting broke up. Mr. Welch, the International ATU vice
president, did not return a call the following day about this deviation from
Robert's Rules of Order, and so it's not clear whether he was so surprised by
Mr. Battaglia's steamroller tactics that he forgot to provide the monitoring for
which he ostensibly was imported by International President Warren George.
'Don't Know If It's True'
"It's the same thing every year - they don't tell you what's in the
contract," Mr. LaRoche said outside the school. When it was pointed out that Mr.
Battaglia had in fact cited the economic details, he responded, "If you don't
see it in writing, how do you know it's true?"
Another dissident from Members for Change, John Bizbano, compared the meeting
to "being in Tiananmen Square. It's not that I was against the contract. But
give us three or four days to sit at the kitchen table and look at it."
Gloria Flaherty was exasperated over Mr. Battaglia's success in preventing
any debate on the terms. '''Sit down, you'll get a chance to talk,''' she said
in wry imitation of Mr. Battaglia. "I'm still waiting for my chance."
Mr. LaRoche said the fact that 95 percent of the union's members had not
attended the meeting dealing with their wages and working conditions for the
next three years was a far more telling statement than the overwhelming support
for the deal from those who turned out.
'Members Are Afraid'
"They don't stand up," he said of those who oppose the way the union is being
run by officials under indictment for being wholly owned subsidiaries of a Mafia
family, "because they're afraid they'll go home and someone is going to kill
them. But they're already killing me - they are killing my pension, they are
robbing my pension."
One man who voted yes on the deal interrupted Mr. LaRoche to say, "You are
right, 100 percent, but you're not going to beat the system." He declined to
give his name.
Another of the dissident group's leaders, Simon Jean-Baptiste, said he was
skeptical of the deal's terms as enunciated by Mr. Battaglia. "I want to see the
contract in writing," he said. "This is the way they've been running the show
for the past 25, 30 years, but we have a right to ask them to do things the
right way. We pay the leadership; they're not working for free. We're not in a
Third World country - this is America."
Banking on the Feds
He said he was not disappointed by the outcome of the contract vote. There is
still the hope that the Federal racketeering trial will do what the
International ATU has been too cowed to do by convicting the union's leadership
and cleansing Local 1181 of the stench of mob domination.
Mr. Jean-Baptiste said he also believed that the complaints of the dissidents
were beginning to have some effect on the rest of the rank and file. "Three
years ago, it was total intimidation," he said of the atmosphere permeating
Local 1181. "People were afraid to be seen talking to us."