home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- BUSINESS, Page 65Business NotesLABORCasey Jones Walks Out
-
-
-
- In the age of the space shuttle, American industry still
- livesby the stodgier, workaday technology of the railroad. The
- proof: less than 24 hours after 235,000 railworkers went on
- strike last week against the nation's major freight rail
- companies, Congress, at the urging of President Bush, ordered
- the strikers back to work. Bush defended the action, saying that
- "the strike would cripple the economy and adversely affect
- national security." Some half million workers in the automobile
- and other rail-dependent industries faced layoffs within days
- of the aborted job action.
-
- The railroad industry and 11 unions have been bargaining
- for years over wages, work rules and health care. Tentative
- agreements were reached with only three unions just before the
- strike deadline. In January a bipartisan board created by the
- White House called for salary hikes accompanied by increases in
- the mileage that crews must travel for a day's pay and in worker
- contributions to health-plan costs. Most unions opposed the
- board's recommendations as promanagement. That may not matter.
- A new board is being set up with the power, so far uninvoked,
- to impose a settlement.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-