Around 20,000 AT&T workers in Connecticut, Nevada and California are striking this afternoon in a two-day action to protest what union officials call the company’s lack of good faith during contract negotiations talks.
“Contract negotiations are never easy,” said CWA District 9 vice president Jim Weitkamp. “But when AT&T violates the law repeatedly, the process really can’t work. Given AT&T’s record profits, tax breaks and jaw-dropping executive compensation, there is no reason for them to insist on lowering the standard of living of a single worker.”
While 17,000 workers in the west and 3,000 employees in Connecticut walk picket lines, fellow AT&T employees in the southeast are still on the job after the company reached tentative deals with unions representing those workers.
AT&T says the new three-year deals with the Communications Workers of America and the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers in Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, Tennessee and North and South Carolina bring wage and “modest pension increases,” according to the company.
Connecticut workers say AT&T’s proposed package in the northeast is not sufficient to address the high cost of living in the state.
But AT&T says declining numbers of landlines means cuts are inevitable. AT&T said in a statement Tuesday’s walkout was not in anyone’s best interest.
Connecticut picketers have been blocking the entrances of several AT&T facilities including in New Haven, where replacement workers appear to be honoring the picket lines after talking with striking workers. Unions are requesting customers not do business with AT&T during the strike.
Late reports indicate several cars with New Jersey license plates have hit three persons on one picket line. The union claims the vehicles were being driven by replacement workers, but no independent confirmation was available.
[flv width=”480″ height=”290″]http://www.phillipdampier.com/video/New Haven Register ATT UNION ON STRIKE 8-7-12.mp4[/flv]
The New Haven Register talked with Tim Smith, a union worker on a picket line outside of an AT&T facility. The video shows picketers encouraging replacement workers to honor the picket line and not report for work. (3 minutes)