Until further notice, the 150 members of the Newspaper Guild of Pittsburgh, newsroom journalists at the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, will be participating in a byline strike in protest of 12 years — and counting — of pay cuts and other concessions demanded by family-owned Block Communications, Inc., headquartered in Toledo, Ohio.This blog has your six.
Beginning today, all reporters, photographers, videographers, graphic artists, columnists and others are withholding their bylines from the paper, website and other PG platforms to express their displeasure with BCI. Additionally, those who toil behind the scenes such as copy editors, page designers, web editors and others, are wearing stickers reading “I Support the Byline Strike.” In all, 99.9 percent of the union is participating in the protest, an astounding sign of solidarity.
The Guild response underscores members’ frustration with significant wage, benefit and staff cuts amid increased workloads for a dozen years. And now, in negotiations for a new contract to replace one that expired March 31, 2017, the company incredibly is seeking even more concessions.
“To my knowledge, there has only been one other byline strike at the PG, in the early 1980s, so this is an extraordinary action that we don’t take lightly,” said Michael A. Fuoco, Guild president. “But these are extraordinary times in which Guild members struggle to support themselves and their families in 2018 on 2006 wages and benefits.”
Guild members’ annual wages have been cut at least 10 percent for each of the past 12 years–that means they are earning 10 percent less than they did in 2006, the last time there was a raise. Also during that time, pensions have been frozen, benefits have been cut, health-care coverage has decreased. Yet the cost of everything — including the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette — has increased dramatically.
It is true that the Post-Gazette, like most newspapers in the country, loses money. But its highly profitable parent company is able to write off those losses and regularly earns more than $100 million in profits annually. Still, over the last 10 months, in some of the most contentious contract talks at the paper in history, the company is demanding even more givebacks. While the Guild typically keeps negotiations confidential, BCI’s refusal to move off its draconian proposal has forced us to go public.
Among the many lowlights in BCI’s proposal:
- Allowing the company the unilateral right to determine the number of hours in a Guild member’s work week, meaning it could be none (all members are currently guaranteed 40 hours a week).
- The unfettered right to use freelancers, managers and third-party vendors to perform work over which Guild members have had jurisdiction for more than 80 years. • The ability to lay off anyone for any reason at any time and out of seniority (currently, there needs to be an economic reason; the company must meet with the Guild to try to find an alternative; and any layoffs must be by seniority in work categories).
Moreover, the Guild recently filed an Unfair Labor Practice charge against the company because, through its union-busting law firm King & Ballow of Nashville, Tenn., it refused to pay a 5 percent increase in the health care premium for 2018, thereby unilaterally cutting our benefits. Companies involved in bargaining are required by federal law to maintain the same level of wages and benefits of expired contracts. It is believed to be the first ULP the Guild has ever filed against the PG but given its disregard for the rule of law, there was no choice but to do so.
- The ability to unilaterally change health-care benefits at any time (currently, any changes must be negotiated).
The situation is serious and volatile. Unless the company comes to its senses and develops a sense of civic responsibility and economic justice for its loyal and talented employees, the very life of the 231-year-old PG is at risk. We fear for our beloved newspaper as BCI ignores the $100 million a year all PG unions have given back to the company since 2006. “We were hired to provide top-rate journalism talent and we’re performing our jobs in an exemplary fashion, regularly winning national, state and regional awards for journalistic excellence,” Fuoco said. “In fact, the PG was named the Pennsylvania Newspaper of the Year in 2017. But while the company markets our plaudits, it refused to treat us as award-winning journalists.
“We will not–we cannot–approve another concessionary contract offered by a highly profitable parent company,” Fuoco added. “The byline strike is but one mobilization effort in our arsenal. We are prepared to use others. We hope and pray we don’t have to do so.”
January 26, 2018
A Statement From The Newspaper Guild Of Pittsburgh
A Statement from the Newspaper Guild of Pittsburgh:
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