Tuesday, June 25, 2013

To my fellow Comcasters.

Before we vote on Thursday, June 27, 2013 please take the time to read the information provided in this letter. The facts listed below are from your fellow Techs, not just Local 827.  Comcast management has brought in their union busting army.  When they are done here they will march on to the next Comcast location giving them the same script, showing the same cards, even the same website.   They don’t know us, our jobs, our situations or our problems, NOR DO THEY CARE. If they are successful, we will just become the next example in their anti-union campaign. As your friends, co-workers and neighbors we need to stay united and have our voices heard!


Comcast's Info Against Unions So Far

“You lose your voice with the Union”
No. You gain protections with a contract. You actually go from your one voice, alone, to the 90 in the shop speaking together! With the voices of 5000 additional members voices backing you up! YOU ARE THE UNION!! Union action and decisions are voted on by the members.  Right now, if you are unfairly reprimanded or worse fired, what recourse do you have? None, you have to sit there and take it. If we are a union, you can grieve the action and bring it in front of an arbitrator. THAT’S HAVING A VOICE!

“You are paying to work”
If we vote to become part of the union, we ARE the union. Dues are for resources such as professional negotiators, lawyers, arbitrators and staff. We would have a firm with multiple lawyers fighting for us! Also, your dues are tax deductible.

“Union shops don't take home trucks”
This is important to all of us pro or con. Ask yourself this, how many times over the years have they said they were going to take them away for not meeting metrics whether it is for repeats or TDM’s? They just said they were going to take them away if we don't make the new 92/92 TDM’s that started this month. They took that back because we filed! You have no guarantee that we will be allowed to take home the trucks in the future. If we fight to put that into our contract we will! 

“You need to sign a paper allowing dues to come out of your pay”
This only makes sense. If you give money to United Way during Comcast's fund drive, the first thing the company does is hand you a paper to sign allowing them to take it directly out of your pay. 

“If we do vote yes, you don't get to vote on the full contract, only bullet points”
False. You not only get to see the full contract but we would have a meeting explaining the whole thing line for line before we vote on it! This wasn’t just told to us by Local 827 but by friends and family members that are union members and who have been involved with negotiations.

“There will be no more Comm Tech Program”
Fact is, it doesn't work now! How many of us are capped? How many of us are stuck at CT4? How many times has your CT title changed? They say that new products will bring new opportunity. The only new product in the seven years since phone, that could generate a raise, was alarms and we didn't get one for doing it! We were told to "GET OVER IT"! Seven years from now if something new comes out are we going to have to get over it again? Now we are getting word that they are going to make alarms part of CT4 forcing us to do them and not get compensated.


Here are some things they aren't telling you:

In union shops jobs and promotions go to in house techs first. This is, however, only possible with a contract.

Union employees can't get laid off until ALL the contractors get let go first!

Union employees get offered OT before they fill in the work with contractors (yes, more OT for us). If contractors are found working in their system and no OT was offered, they get paid for it.

Union employees get their breaks and lunches EVERYDAY. They don't need to beg and plead for years to get them!

Union techs don't get "occurrences" for using their flex time. They have up to one hour before the start of their shift to use flex time, not schedule it two weeks in advance!


There are Union techs working Mon-Fri.

Union techs can still do NTCI's

Union techs get the same uniforms and boots we do.

Comcast wants to keep its power over you! They know that if we organize they can no longer change the rules to suit their needs and wallets whenever they please. What they are counting on is that you will only to listen to their side story. They are counting on you to stay right where you’re at and not take action.
Comcast has no money for decent raises yet they are spending millions to keep the union out. Ask yourself why. Better yet, ask them why! They want total control of your jobs and raises. They don't want you to have a say in your work place or your career.

“Get Over It?” No, Get Control Of It!


VOTE UNION YES!

Monday, June 24, 2013

One Year After ‘No’ Vote, Mass . Comcast Techs Go IBEW

This article is re-printed from the pages of The Electrical Worker, a National Publication every IBEW member receives.


In his years working as a Comcast tech in southern Massachusetts, Scott Hartman never worried about job security even as an at-will employee.“I’d always felt secure on my job,” said the father of two with 25 years in the business.

“It was never really a major issue in mind.” But Hartman’s work climate turned colder one day four years ago when he heard about a group of co-workers serving a nearby area who were sudden and without explanation laid off. Many were veteran cable and fiber optic installation technicians who had given decades to the company. Workers were forced to clean out their company trucks. Management stationed taxis outside to take home the newly unemployed, who were replaced with contractors.Those workers had families to provide for and mortgages to pay, and their hard work and effort suddenly meant nothing, Hartman said. That was an extremely harsh reality to accept.

Despite that scare, Hartman said he still felt reasonably safe in his job. Known as a leader around the shop, Hartman’s years of experience and respect for management and co-workers alike have helped him earn a reputation as someone to be counted on. I love what I do, he said many times during a phone interview for this article.


The First Campaign

So when an IBEW organizing drive began in early 2011 to try to bring an amplified voice to workers covering the South Coast of the state, Hartman thought it over. And he decided he was and he decided he was better on his own.

"During that election I was on the other side", he said " I used to be against the union, I just didnt beleive we needed it, personally I dont have any problems or complaints."

His co-workers largely followed suit, voting narrowly against IBEW representation from Local 2322 in mid-December 2011.

Activists familiar with the campaign said it was a typical set of management tactics that thwarted the effort."Comcast made a laundry list of promises that they failed to deliver on", said IBEW lead organizer Steve Smith, who has spent years working to organize employees at one of the most profitable,, but lowest paying corporations in the U.S.

But promised wage increases never materialized, work remained stressful and moral was waning.

Failed Promises Change Attitudes

“After the election, and things got back to normal, I sat back and realized how I was suddenly not feeling so comfortable with things,” Hartman said. He cites a series of misleading statements from management as part of what shook his foundation.

At the same time, there was a separate group of techs who remained pro- IBEW. So when activists ramped up organizing efforts last fall, management pulled out the stops. Captive audience meetings. Union-busting attorneys. Disinformation about the IBEW’s intentions. And despite his confidence in his abilities, Hartman says he couldn't shake that image of a mass layoff four years earlier. “As I sat through those [captive audience] meetings, it made me realize that maybe I do really need  protection in a union,” he said. “I’m vulnerable.”

Then there were the headlines in the business sections of newspapers trumpeting massive company profits. USA Today also ran a feature last spring entitled “Eight Companies That Most Owe Workers a Raise.” At the top? Comcast.

“In fiscal 2012, Comcast's net income was $6.2 billion, a nearly 50 percent increase from the previous year,” the editors wrote. “In the past 12 months, the company's stock rose by roughly 44  percent … Comcast customer care and direct sales jobs often pay modestly. The average salary for a Customer Account Executive at Comcast was just $13.39 an hour.” And while techs like Hartman make more than the front-line service employees, the pattern of low-wage work yielding high profits for  management runs deep.

Redoubled Push Yields Victory

Changing course, Hartman and a majority of his co-workers voted “yes” for IBEW representation in an NLRB-certified election April 24, pulling off what was an admittedly challenging quest for worker's rights
at the goliath company just one year before.

The 96 workers—who are based out of the Fall River and  Fairhaven shops and service customers in more than a dozen cities in the Bay State—are now members of Middleboro Local 2322. Activists are mobilizing for first contract talks, which they hope will happen soon.

Other IBEW activists integral in the campaign win included International Representative Carol Fitzgerald,  Local 2322 Business Manager Eric Hetrick and Local 2322 steward Derek Rose. Smith, the lead organizer, offered special appreciation to Second District International Vice President Frank Carroll for his support.

“We have an awful lot of work ahead of us, but these employees are dedicated and want positive change,” Smith said. “This vote is a great beginning, and it should give hope to other Comcast workers  Nationwide looking to stand up for a stronger voice on the job.”

Comcast’s profits nearly doubled since 2008, which allowed CEO Brian Roberts to reap nearly $30 million last year, the USA Today reports. But the company will strongly oppose efforts to give workers their fair share of these profits, according to East Windsor, N.J., Local 827 member Rich Spieler. “For workers to stand up and raise their voice for decent wages and security takes an extraordinary amount of guts, trust and solidarity in the workplace,”said Spieler, who sits on Local 827’s executive board and is secretary-treasurer of an IBEW council representing Comcast workers.

Part of Comcast’s strategy to fight unionization, Spieler said, is to draw out the time between successful elections and first contract negotiations. In the interim, the company will attempt to sow discontent among employees in an effort to squash the efforts workers make to obtain concrete gains in wages and benefits.

But Spieler maintains optimism. In spite of these challenges, about 1,000 workers throughout the East Coast and beyond have secured agreements from the company. “Where we have seen strong bonds between workers who have organized, these IBEW members have gotten the company to agree to a fair contract despite Comcast’s intention not to,” he said.

The IBEW currently services contracts for members at Downers Grove, Ill., Local 21; Philadelphia Local 98; Sheffield, Ala., Local 558; East Windsor, N.J., Local 827; and Bethlehem, Pa., Local 1600. And with tenacity, Spieler said, that list will only grow.

Gathering Momentum 

Organizers and pro-IBEW employees say that spirit is spreading to other shops. After the win for Massachusetts workers was broadcast to potential members nationwide, Comcast employees in
Vineland, N.J., successfully petitioned  May 21 for an NLRB election. If they win, 91 new members will gain representation from East Windsor Local 827.

A May 30 e-mail sent by an activist employee to fellow Vineland Comcast techs refutes management’s claim that unionization will harm the work force. “They say that we lose our voice if we become a union,” wrote the employee, who declined to be named in this story. “We don't—we become one loud voice together. They say ‘the union’ like it's a third party that will speak for us in our place. We will be the union. The union is us. We negotiate, we vote on the contract, and we speak for ourselves.”

In Massachusetts, Hartman is quick to emphasize that his “yes” vote and  continued activism aren't reactionary or emotional. If anything, he says, it’s simply logical. “I can’t stress enough that it’s not ‘us’ against ‘them,’” he said. “I never want to go to work and fight with my bosses. I get along great, and I’m certainly not looking to clash and bang heads. My support for the IBEW is all and to ensure my future at a company I enjoy working for.”

Tuesday, June 11, 2013

Job Security Should Not Be A Matter of Comcast's Will

The following language is taken from Comcast's Employee Handbook.

"The contents of the Comcast Employee Handbook are not intended to create an express or implied contract of employment or other legally enforceable promise between you and the company and you may not rely on it as such.

Your employment relationship with Comcast is " At Will" and nothing in the Employee Handbook is intended to extend or guarantee employment in any way or for any specific period of time. Just as you have the right to terminate your employment with the company at any time for any reason. Nothing stated in the Employee Handbook shall be construed as impairing or altering your rights or the company's rights in any way.

The individual provisions of the Employee Handbook are simply guidelines and Comcast reserves sole discretion to interpret them. Comcast also reserves the right to change, delete, suspend, discontinue, or otherwise revise the Employee Handbook at any time for any reason, without notice."

With an IBEW contract, terms, and conditions of employment, including our wages and benefits, would be spelled out and cannot be unilaterally changed by Comcast without negotiating those changes with us, the employees.
To Speak with an Organizer Call 1-877-4UNIONU or Email voteunionyes@verizon.net