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About Northwest labor press. (Portland , Ore.) 1987-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 17, 2006)
...Employees feel shortchanged by Portland School Dist. (From Page 1) Unions (DCU), an alliance of 16 unions representing about 300 workers in a number of occupations, including main- tenance workers, school bus drivers and mechanics, radio station employees, and driver-ed instructors. It took the DCU close to two years to get its 1999- 2004 contract. And its most recent con- tract — which spanned from mid-2004 to the end of 2005 — took nearly two years to bargain, and wasn’t signed un- til less than two weeks before it expired. Chief negotiator Gene Blackburn of Teamsters Local 206 said DCU reps are not relishing the thought of returning for the next year-and-a-half of bargain- ing. • Next are 1,200 clerical support staff, classroom assistants and special- ed assistants, who are represented by the Portland Federation of Teachers and Classified Employees (PFTCE), also known as Local 111 of American Fed- eration of Teachers-Oregon. They’ve been without a contract since June 30, 2005. Four mediated bargaining ses- sions are scheduled for March. • And last in line are the “lunch ladies.” The 250 cafeteria workers in the nutrition services department belong to Service Employees International Union (SEIU) Local 503, Oregon’s second- largest labor union. They’ve also been without a contract since June 30. All but a dozen of them are women. Most earn $9.07 an hour. One lead worker per school earns $11.80 to $13.16 an hour. To represent school district manage- ment in negotiations with these work- At one of two remaining work stations, cafeteria workers package frozen potato sticks in a cavernous kitchen that once prepared much of the food served at Portland Public Schools. Last year, budget cuts eliminated 32 cafeteria positions, and struck cinnamon rolls and wiener wraps from the menu. ers, PPS pays an outside attorney $190 an hour. The attorney is Richard Lieb- man of the Barran Liebman law firm; PPS in-house attorney Jollee Faber Pat- terson says the district is getting a spe- cial deal — that’s half Liebman’s nor- mal rate. Cafeteria workers, the lowest-paid workers in the district, say they don’t work for the wages; they work for the benefits — full-year, full-family health coverage for 171 six-hour days of work. For these workers, health coverage costs work out to $8.84 per hour. [Part- timers get less-expensive employee- only health coverage.] The district now proposes to elimi- nate health benefits for new-hires who work less than full-time. [About two- fifths of the unit are part-timers.] And for the remainder, the district wants to cap its health insurance contribution at $779 a month, with employees paying any increase over that amount. They currently pay from $0 to $107 a month, depending on the plan. Need in-home care? Remember to shop union. W HEN you’re seeking in-home care support for a loved one, think about the dedicated and caring staff at Addus HealthCare Inc. – the only unionized private homecare agency in Oregon. “They’re not willing to move in any direction for us,” said lead cafeteria worker Deanna Gathman, who serves on the union’s bargaining team. The two sides also disagree on wages, contract length and contracting out. Cafeteria workers want a three-year contract with 3 percent annual raises; the school district wants four years of 2.65 percent annual raises. Faced with the threat to job security from private companies like Sodexho and Aramark that run many school district cafeterias, workers want the chance to “bid” if PPS moves to contract out cafeteria services altogether. Management has refused that union proposal. Cafeteria workers used to belong to the same SEIU local as the district’s 300-plus custodians (School Employ- ees Local 140), but in 2002 the district terminated the custodians and hired an outside janitorial company to do the work. Local 140 was dissolved and the remaining cafeteria workers were merged into Local 503. However, Local 140 challenged the school district’s action in court, arguing that it violated a state law that requires school custodians to be civil service employees. The law applies only to Portland. The case went to the Oregon Supreme Court, which ruled against PPS management in October 2005. PPS attorneys asked the court to reconsider. Local 140 lawyers think the court will “reconsider” by mid-year, and will up- hold its decision. That could mean rein- statement and back pay for the termi- nated custodians, the union says, though the district would likely fight that. For the cafeteria workers, as negoti- ations dragged on, they began taking their cause directly to the elected school board, attending board meetings and seeking to meet with board members. Only one board member, Dan Ryan, has met with cafeteria workers so far. “These workers are treated as sec- ond-class citizens by the district,” says SEIU staffperson Shannon Strumpfer, who was assigned to help the cafeteria workers negotiate with management. Newstrand, the PPS labor relations (International Standard Serial Number 0894-444X) In In In In In Established in 1900 at Portland, Oregon as a voice of the labor movement. Portland: 503-252-0724 Salem: 503-364-6443 Albany: 1-503-364-6443 Eugene: 541-842-5567 Medford: 541-857-9899 4275 NE Halsey St., P.O. Box 13150, Portland, Ore. 97213 Telephone: (503) 288-3311 Fax Number: (503) 288-3320 Editor: Michael Gutwig Staff: Don McIntosh, Cheri Rice Published on a semi-monthly basis on the first and third Fridays of each month by the Oregon Labor Press Publishing Co. Inc., a non- profit corporation owned by 20 unions and councils including the Oregon AFL-CIO. Serving more than 120 union organizations in Ore- gon and SW Washington. Subscriptions $13.75 per year for union members. Group rates available to trade union organizations. PERIODICALS POSTAGE PAID AT PORTLAND, OREGON. CHANGE OF ADDRESS NOTICE: Three weeks are required for a change of address. When ordering a change, please give your old and new addresses and the name and number of your local union. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to NORTHWEST LABOR PRESS, P.O. BOX 13150-0150, PORTLAND, OR 97213 A message from Addus and the working women and men providing quality long-term care in Oregon. Member Press Associates Inc. WESTERN LABOR PRESS ASSOCIATION FEBRUARY 17, 2006 NORTHWEST LABOR PRESS manager, resigned in January, but with attorney Liebman still in charge of bar- gaining, union leaders aren’t hopeful that the district’s approach will change. PFTCE President Kathy Hornstein said when her union didn’t accept the school district’s offer, Liebman’s de- meanor changed. “He took our counter offer, and shoved it back across the table without even reading it. He said ‘We told you what we were giving you and that’s it, take it or leave it.’ ” Union leaders acknowledge that times are tough at PPS, but they feel disrespected, and they’re mistrustful of the district’s numbers. “They’re tripping over dimes and nickels as they lose dollars,” said the DCU’s Blackburn. Some, like Hornstein, think top ad- ministrators get secret raises. Lawrence disputes that, and says the district has been in a belt-tightening mode since voters passed Ballot Mea- sure 5, a property tax limitation, in 1990. Lawrence said just 4 percent of the PPS budget is spent on central ad- ministration, and the district has made all the cuts it can make without hurting classroom education. After Measure 5, school districts got most of their funding from a state school fund — all property taxes in the state are put in a pool, which the Legis- lature divvies up. PPS backers say the Legislature’s formula disadvantages Portland, which has a higher cost of liv- ing, more special education students, and older buildings that cost more to heat and maintain. In recent years, local voters approved local property and in- come taxes to prevent cuts in the dis- trict. But the expiration of the local op- tion property tax last year resulted in a $26 million budget cut. PPS’ budget went from $391.6 million for the 2004- 05 school year to $365.7 million for the 2005-06 school year. The district re- acted to the loss with a variety of cuts — including 250 teaching positions, 150 clerical and teacher assistant posi- tions and a new approach to school lunches. To save money, PPS no longer pre- pares food from scratch. Instead nutri- tion service workers repackage, heat and serve canned and frozen food, and the district contracted with a private company to make and deliver salads and sandwiches. The change cost 32 union jobs, and it meant the loss of some of the district’s best-loved foods, including cinnamon rolls and wiener wraps. This year Multnomah County’s tem- porary income tax is due to expire, with the result that the district’s budget for the next school year is projected to fall $36 million, to $329 million, barring some further rescue from local taxpay- ers. As of press time, Portland Mayor Tom Potter was mulling whether to campaign for a new school-supporting tax on the May ballot. But the bad blood between the dis- trict and its unions has union leaders wondering out loud whether they’ll even support a campaign for a new tax. PAGE 3