District Council 33 Strike Day 8 with no deal
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Sorry, rats. The “Parker piles” are about to disappear. 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,
The members of District Council 33 headed back to work on Thursday, but say they're frustrated with the tentative contract agreement.
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.
As the city continues to negotiate with AFSCME District Council 33, the union’s first work stoppage since the 1980s continues.
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FOX 29 News Philadelphia on MSNParker says city has offered District Council 33 'largest one-term pay increase' in over 30 yearsArticles and videos about Parker says city has offered District Council 33 'largest one-term pay increase' in over 30 years on FOX 29 Philadelphia.
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WPHL Philadelphia on MSNDistrict Council 33 on strike: how it will impact Philadelphia, from public safety to trash pickupDistrict Council 33, Philadelphia’s largest blue-collar union, will possibly go on strike as union leaders walked out of negotiations just hours before the strike deadline and
Philadelphia faces a strike impacting essential services, with the city taking legal steps to maintain public safety.
That's from a radio-TV campaign paid for by District Council 33, the blue collar city workers union. Both DC 33 and the white collar union DC 47 have been without a new contract since 2009, ...
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.