Community Corner

Oakland Recycling Workers Walk Off the Job

Waste Management and California Waste Solutions employees say they are protesting low wages and dangerous working conditions.

By Bay City News Service

Recycling workers at a Waste Management facility in San Leandro
walked off the job Tuesday to protest what they say are low wages and dangerous working conditions.

The employees, who are members of International Longshore and
Warehouse Union Local 6's recycling unit, also are meeting with Oakland City
Council members today to discuss a long-term contract that the city is
negotiating with Waste Management and another company, California Waste
Solutions, union spokesman Craig Merrilees said.

California Waste Solutions employees also are participating in the
one-day walkout, Merrilees said. He estimated that about 200 employees are
participating in the job action.

The contract isn't on the agenda for the council's meeting tonight
but workers will discuss it during the open forum part of the meeting,
according to Merrilees.

Waste Management spokesman David Tucker said that contract won't
begin until July 2015.

Tucker said the walkout isn't affecting the company's customers in
Alameda County because their waste and recycling materials are being picked
up by Teamsters union members who aren't participating in the job action.

Merrilees said the people who are participating in the walkout
work at Waste Management's transfer station on Davis Street in San Leandro,
where they sort recycling material.

Evangelina Macias, a 66-year-old San Leandro woman who worked for
Waste Management for 13 years, was killed at the facility on June 19, 2012,
after she was struck by a piece of heavy equipment.

Although Macias was a landfill worker, Merrilees said her death is
an example of the dangers that recycling workers face at the facility.

Tucker said Waste Management has had a "stellar" safety record at
the San Leandro facility except for Macias' death and it has implemented
additional safety measures since then.

Merrilees said most recycling workers for Waste Management and
California Waste Solutions in Alameda County only make $12.67 per hour and
are upset that their pay is much less than recycling workers in San Francisco
and San Jose who are paid $20 an hour for similar work.

Tucker said Waste Management "has been seeking a fair, reasonable
and sustainable agreement that includes employee participation in covering a
small portion of their health and welfare premiums.

He said Local 6's last contract with Waste Management was
negotiated in 2006 and expired in February 2011 and workers have continued to
work under the terms of that agreement.

Tucker said recycling workers are seeking a 65 percent increase in
compensation over five years but management is offering a 3 percent increase
for each year of five years, for a total increase of $2 an hour.

The company also is offering a company-paid pension plan for
employees, Tucker said.

He said clerical and landfill workers who belong to ILWU Local 6
accepted similar offers in April, but Merrilees said those workers are paid
much more than recycling employees.

Merrilees said the recycling workers feel "antagonized and
insulted" by Waste Management and California Waste Solutions because of their
low pay as well as their unsafe working conditions.

California Waste Solutions officials couldn't be reached for
comment.Copyright © 2013 by Bay City News, Inc. -- Republication, Rebroadcast or any other Reuse without the express written consent of Bay City News, Inc. is prohibited.
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