You have commented 339 times on Rantburg.

Your Name
Your e-mail (optional)
Website (optional)
My Original Nic        Pic-a-Nic        Sorry. Comments have been closed on this article.
Bold Italic Underline Strike Bullet Blockquote Small Big Link Squish Foto Photo
Home Front: Culture Wars
Looking for the next Idiot of the Day,,,
2009-06-10
Posted by:Procopius2k

#3  Dodo,

You're giving Omaha Ideas.
Posted by: Bright Pebbles   2009-06-10 20:36  

#2  "We're skeptical about the number of bidders who would try to purchase an entity that doesn't make any money and doesn't have a labor base that appears willing to try to get it toward being profitable,"

How about the U.S. Government?
Posted by: DoDo   2009-06-10 19:25  

#1  Globe reporters make plea for mercy

Desperate Globe reporters yesterday pleaded with New York Times [NYT] owner Arthur “Pinch” Sulzberger Jr. to “call off the lawyers” and “head off a bitter fight” even as the paper’s biggest union and management dug in for what’s shaping up as a long battle over $10 million in givebacks.

“We believe that you don’t want us to take a 23 percent pay cut. We believe you understand that the consequences of such a drastic cut would be disastrous for many of us who have worked tirelessly for the Globe for years,” the letter said. “Not only could many of us lose our homes and our child care, but too much of our top talent might no longer be able to afford to work for a newspaper that they’ve given their hearts and souls to for so long.”

“Mr. Sulzberger, we’re asking for your leadership. You can make a difference. We desperately need it right now.”

The cry for help - which lavished Sulzberger with praise and called him a “mensch,” Yiddish for a person of integrity - was sent after the company told Boston Newspaper Guild members they were getting a 23 percent pay cut next week after they rejected the company’s $10 million in cost-cutting demands. The offer, which included the equivalent of a 10 percent pay cut and drastically reduced benefits, was voted down Monday by a slim 277-265 vote.

“I have to do everything within my means to safeguard this institution,” Globe publisher P. Steven Ainsley told members in an e-mail yesterday.

Guild leaders met with their lawyers yesterday and Totten sent a letter to Globe negotiator Gregory Thornton asking management to “rescind” its impasse declaration and 23 percent pay cut - and return to the negotiating table.

Totten said there’s been no “substantive bargaining” regarding the 23 percent cut and imposing it violates the contract and law.

Globe spokesman Bob Powers said the company responded with its own letter, telling Totten they wonÂ’t withdraw the cut or return to the bargaining table.

Guild leaders plan to meet with Times Co. management Monday.

Meanwhile, at a union meeting last night, Totten said he has filed an unfair labor practice charge with the National Labor Relations Board, whose investigators plan to meet with Guild leaders on Tuesday to begin an investigation.

Guild labor attorney David Wanger told members management can’t claim an impasse and impose cuts until there’s been an arbitration. “There’s a dispute as to whether they are properly proceeding,” Wanger said.

Globe copy editor Jim Franklin stood up and said many staffers are scared and financially stressed. “People think we’re all fat and rich and we can afford to take a hit like this,” Franklin said.

Afterward, staffers circulated a petition calling for a mediator to settle the dispute.

Times Co. spokeswoman Catherine Mathis had some good news for Globe staffers, saying the company doesnÂ’t plan to close the 137-year-old broadsheet. The Times had threatened to shutter the paper unless its unions came up with $20 million in concessions.


Thy're groveling. It's delicious...
I can't wait to tell Derrick Z. Jackson that, yes, I would like fries with that.
Posted by: tu3031   2009-06-10 17:19  

00:00