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Locked Out Local 702 Members Pitch in for Habitat for Humanity

While locked out from their jobs at SIGECO, IBEW Local 702, West Frankfort, Illinois, members helped build a Habitat for Humanity home in Evansville. The IBEW volunteers are pictured with the happy new homeowner, Nika Johnson, (fourth from right, front row).

The Evansville Courier & Press ran a big newspaper story last summer featuring photos of IBEW members and a headline that read: IBEW Pitching in for Habitat.

About 20 members of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers Local 702, locked out from their jobs at Southern Indiana Gas & Electric Co., turned their downtime into volunteer time Tuesday for Habitat for Humanitys housing blitz, reported the Indiana newspaper on July 12, 2000.

Local 702 members had heard that one of the 24 homes being constructed during a week-long Habitat blitz was behind schedule. The house sponsored by Vectren Corp., SIGECOs parent company, was the furthest behind when the union workers arrived early Tuesday morning, reported the Evansville Courier. As of Tuesday afternoon, the house was almost completely caught up.

In one day the IBEW volunteers put the roof on the Habitat home and built the interior walls. The [IBEW] group turned the day of hard labor into entertainment, flipping burgers on their own grills and ribbing each other about their carpentry skills, reported the newspaper. The new homeowner, Nika Johnson, told reporters she was delighted with the progress the IBEW members helped achieve. Yesterday we were quite a bit behind, but these guys came in today and have been hauling tail, she was quoted as saying. They have been working hard. It has been unreal.

We decided that since we were locked out, wed come out and help out, said Local 702 member James Dimmett, chairman of the Evansville Unit.

Local 702 Business Representative Matt Hemenway said local union members were locked out at SIGECO for 30 days. They approved a contract on July 30, and the power plant employees went back to work on the 31st.

 

March 2001 IBEW Journal

Bush Ban on PLAs Snarls Big D.C. Bridge

The Washington, D.C., area building trades unions negotiated a Project Labor Agreement on the reconstruction of the Wilson Bridge across the Potomac River only to be hit by President Bushs Executive Order banning PLAs on federal projects.
We believe the presidents executive order is illegal, said Edward C. Sullivan, president of the AFL-CIO Building and Construction Trades Department. Sullivan noted that for more than 50 years, governors from both parties have made highly successful use of PLAs. The legality of one such project, the Boston Harbor project known as the Big Dig, was upheld by the U.S. Supreme Court against a challenge from non-union contractors.
Regardless of the outcome of legal actions on the PLAs, the immediate impact is delayon a project that has already been discussed for 12 years. Every day that we wait on this project, about 190,000 people are sitting in traffic, said Maryland Transportation Secretary John D. Porcari. We cant afford another day.
Porcaris boss, Maryland Democratic Gov. Parris Glendening, negotiated the agreement as the best way to assure an adequate supply of skilled labor at fixed wage rates. Glendening called Bushs action a political payoff to big contributors that takes a swipe at the working men and women of America. Glendening signed the agreement before President Clinton left office, but the Federal Highway Administration had not approved it before Bush took over.
Like Sullivan, Glendening cited the success of PLAs as a tool that has provided the only way for a bipartisan group of governors and local officials to get complex projects done on time and to protect workers in very dangerous jobs.  One Republican governor, John G. Rowland of Connecticut, had joined Glendening in urging Bush not to ban Project Labor Agreements.