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BMWE Lodge 3014 |
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Pennsylvania Federation
Brotherhood of Maintenance of Way Division
of the
International Brotherhood of Teamsters
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WASHINGTON, Feb. 14 /U.S. Newswire/ -- The National Carriers'
Conference Committee (NCCC) said today it has voluntarily withdrawn
requests to the National Mediation Board (NMB) that the freight
railroads be released from mediation with a seven-union coalition,
citing concerns that a legal dispute with another union on a key
bargaining issue needed to be resolved first.
Congressman Don Young (R-Alaska), chairman of the House Committee on
Transportation and Infrastructure, had written the NMB on Jan. 23,
urging the Board to consider whether it would be appropriate to
release the parties from mediation before the courts have resolved
litigation between the NCCC and the United Transportation Union (UTU)
regarding bargaining on crew staffing.
In a Feb. 13 letter to the NMB, Robert F. Allen, chairman of the
National Railway Labor Conference (NRLC), said he is confident the
railroads will prevail in the UTU litigation pending in U.S.
District Court in East St. Louis, Ill. However, Allen said,
"Chairman Young's concerns and admonitions must be given serious
consideration."
As a result, the railroads decided "the most practical and
reasonable approach would be to address these matters concurrently
with both organizations," referring to the union coalition and the
UTU, the letter read.
While awaiting the federal court's decision on the UTU matter, the
NCCC will continue mediation with both the coalition and the UTU.
"The key matters at issue this round with the UTU will also affect
the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers and Trainmen (BLET)," a
member of the union coalition, Allen said.
The railroads are seeking to modernize certain train staffing and
work rules in order to have the flexibility they need to deploy new
technology that will make the nation's rail system even safer, in
part by reducing accidents caused by human error, the most common
cause of train accidents. The new train control technology will meet
all of the safety requirements of the Federal Railroad
Administration.
Allen noted that the NCCC has been in "intensive negotiations under
the Board's mediatory auspices" with both the UTU and the Rail Labor
Bargaining Coalition, made up of seven unions led by the Teamsters
union, "but continue to encounter significant obstacles in our
pursuit of a voluntary agreement."
Last December, the NCCC asked the Board to release the freight
railroads from mediation with the Teamsters' coalition, citing "no
discernible progress" toward reaching voluntary agreements, while
continuing to negotiate with the UTU. At that time, Allen said the
railroads welcomed the opportunity to continue negotiations even
though "vast differences remain between us on virtually every major
issue," because the railroads "remain committed to reaching
voluntary agreements with all the unions."
The NCCC had filed applications with the NMB on June 10 for
mediation with the Teamsters' Rail Labor Bargaining Coalition, whose
seven members include the BLET and the Brotherhood of Maintenance of
Way Employes.
The railroads also are continuing direct negotiations with four
other rail unions.
The National Carriers' Conference Committee of the National Railway
Labor Conference, headquartered in Washington, DC, is the national
bargaining agent for more than 30 railroads, including all of the
nation's major freight carriers, involved in the current round of
bargaining with 13 major rail unions. Employees covered in the
current round include more than 90 percent of unionized freight rail
employees.
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