District Council 33 Strike Day 8 with no deal
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Philadelphia’s first major city workers strike since 1986 lasted eight days and four hours before Mayor Cherelle L. Parker and Greg Boulware, president of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees District Council 33,
Members of AFSCME District Council 33 will vote on the tentative agreement the union reached with the city starting on Monday, the same day that residential trash collection resumes.The 9,000 members of District Council 33 must vote between Monday,
Philadelphia's largest labor union, AFSCME District Council 33, is getting ready to cast votes to decide if a new contract will be ratified.
The deal includes a new three-year contract coupled with the one-year contract extension and a 14% pay increase over the next four years.
Members of District Council 33, which represents over 9,000 city workers, have walked out of negotiations for a new contract with the city, NBC10 has learned. If no contract is reached, membership ...
The members of District Council 33 headed back to work on Thursday, but say they're frustrated with the tentative contract agreement. 24/7 Live Philadelphia Pennsylvania New Jersey Delaware.
The contract, if ratified by DC 33's membership, is retroactive to July 1. After more than a week on strike and several stalled negotiation sessions, leaders of Philadelphia’s largest municipal union came to an agreement with the city, returning some 9,000 blue collar workers to the job.
Trash pickup is scheduled to resume in Philadelphia on Monday after the DC 33 strike ended, but neighbors say some people are still dropping off garbage.