Oyster Creek Strike
The Strike is over. Local 1289 workers to return to work Monday.
August 8, 2003 The Asbury Park Press
Oyster Creek workers vote to end strike, accept 3-year contract
LACEY -- Members of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers Local 1289 last night approved a contract offered by the management of the Oyster Creek nuclear power plant, ending the longest strike in the plant's 34-year history.
The three-year contract approved by the union gives the plant, owned by AmerGen Energy Co., the ability to lay off as many workers as it wishes in the next three years, said Stroup. Supervisors are now also barred from doing bargaining unit work, and a provision that would match the overtime earned by outside contractors to union workers was deleted, Stroup said.
The contract also provides for a 3 percent salary increase per year over a three-year period, increases the employee 401(k) plan, creates special increases in the 401(k) plans of workers over 50, and a 10 percent increase in vacation time, said Gina G. Scala, spokeswoman for the plant.
Asked who has emerged as the victor in this difficult strike, Stroup replied, "Nobody. There are no winners. The company doesn't win. They got the contract they wanted, and we got a contract we didn't want. We're afraid this contract is going to lead to an eventual problem at the plant. We fought it every step of the way -- but we can only fight so far."
August 8, 2003 The Press of Atlantic City
Oyster Creek union accepts contract offer
WALL TOWNSHIP - With misgivings about the fairness of the settlement proposal submitted by Oyster Creek officials and agreed upon by their union negotiators, a majority of the 198 members of IBEW Local 1289 on strike from the nuclear power plant ratified a new contract Thursday night and will return to work Monday.
It was a bittersweet day for the local International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers who had been on strike for 11 weeks and according to union President Ed Stroup, now had to live with a contract that was worse than parent company Exelon Nuclear's "last, best final offer" before the May 22 strike.
"People are happy to work (again), but are not happy about the contract," Stroup said.
More than 90 percent of the union turned out to vote at Wall Township headquarters Thursday, Stroup said.
He called the results of the vote a "squeaker" in favor of ratifying the contract.
Stroup said that union members were heading out late Thursday night to Lacey, to the front of the 34-year-old power plant, to tear down pickets and angry protest signs that marked the longest strike in the plant's history.
August 8, 2003 Ocean County Observer
Strike ends
LACEY -- Members of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers Local 1289 voted yesterday to accept the settlement package worked out between the union and representatives from Oyster Creek Nuclear Generating Station, thereby ending the strike that began 79 days ago.
However, he said that AmerGen, the company that manages Oyster Creek, renegged on their original statement to let go of 10 percent of the union workforce. This was one of the company moves that began the strike.
"They're indicating that they are not going to hold to the number of job cuts," he said.
He said that AmerGen did not know how many jobs would be cut, nor the positions, only that the number would be greater than 10 percent.
"The company has the right to hire permanent replacement workers," Stroup had told union members, "no matter how you decide to vote."
Employees are scheduled to return to work on Monday, in groups of 40 to 50 a day for the week, Stroup said.
Site communicator Gina Scala said that 19 strikers had crossed the picket lines.
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