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During Philadelphia’s divisive eight-day city worker strike that ended early Wednesday morning with a tentative contract ...
Sorry, rats. The “Parker piles” are about to disappear. Philadelphia’s first major city workers strike since 1986 lasted ...
Local 2187, which represents administrative assistants and professionals, is holding a strike authorization vote until July ...
Philadelphia's first major city worker strike since 1986 lasted eight days and four hours before Mayor Cherelle L. Parker and ...
The contract, if ratified by DC 33's membership, is retroactive to July 1. After more than a week on strike and several ...
DC 33 could "potentially" go back on strike in Philadelphia if tentative agreement isn't ratified 03:32. AFSCME District Council 33 President Greg Boulware wasn't happy as he left negotiations ...
Negotiations are set to continue Tuesday between AFSCME District Council 33 and Philadelphia city leaders. It's still unclear ...
While Mayor Cherelle Parker and city leaders celebrated the end of the District Council 33 strike on Wednesday, union bosses remained dejected about the outcome.
Despite a deal to end the strike by members of DC33 in Philadelphia, regular trash collection will not begin right away.
Francis Ryan, a professor at Rutgers University, believes District Council 33 got the best deal it could with.
Philly’s AFSCME DC 33 union reached a tentative deal, but members have through July 20 to vote on whether to ratify it. Trash ...
AFSCME District Council 33 President Greg Boulware said the union is set to vote on that tentative agreement early next week.