Hawaii Tribune-Herald bargaining bulletin

Negotiators for the guild and the company met on Wednesday and Thursday in Hilo to discuss a new collective bargaining agreement.

The company presented a revised two-year contract offer that included expanded management rights to subcontract work in all departments, annual cash bonuses equal to 1 percent of a worker’s salary, and an 80 percent to 20 percent premium split for health insurance. (Workers now pay nothing for Kaiser; 10 percent for HMSA.)

The company’s offer, which was presented as a package that must be accepted in its entirety, also would have made seniority one of several factors when determining which workers could be laid off, rather than the sole factor. The offer, however, did not contain previous management proposals to scale back vacation, sick leave and other benefits.

Members of the Hawaii Tribune-Herald bargaining committee caucused during talks Wednesday and Thursday in Honolulu. Management has shown little interest in serious bargaining, refusing to narrow a huge list of takeaway demands including a big jump in health care costs, pay freeze, end of seniority protection against layoff, unfettered right to subcontract two departments and onerous "social media policy." From left, Heather Ahue, Derrick DePledge, Colin Stewart and Alicia Tanaka. PMWG photo 2013.
Members of the Hawaii Tribune-Herald bargaining committee caucused during talks recently in Honolulu. From left, Heather Ahue, Derrick DePledge, Colin Stewart and Alicia Tanaka. PMWG photo 2013.

The guild responded with several recommendations, which included a three-year contract duration, a signing bonus, 4 percent pay raises after the first and second years, and a 90 percent to 10 percent premium split for Kaiser and an 80 to 20 percent split for HMSA. The proposed premium share was higher than the guild had previously offered.

The guild has not proposed any change to seniority.

The guild also continues to recommend voluntary buyouts and an enhanced severance package in exchange for the company’s right to subcontract work in the mailroom and ad production departments, which would involve layoffs.

The company clarified on Thursday that it would likely retain three part-time jobs in the mailroom if it achieves an expanded subcontracting right. (There are currently three full-time and seven part-time workers in the mailroom.)

Inserting would no longer be done in Hilo. The three part-timers, according to the company, would unload completed newspapers when they arrive by truck from West Hawaii and distribute the papers to independent contractors and newspaper carriers.

The three part-timers would also deliver shortages, missed or damaged papers on weekends and holidays, and down routes as needed.

The two sides were unable to reach consensus on the company’s offer or the guild’s response.

Representatives for the company on Thursday withdrew previous offers to include an extensive social media policy and an employee handbook in the new contract.

The company also indicated that it would not agree to provide a pro-rated sick leave benefit for part-time workers or use the Internal Revenue Service standard fuel price to determine the automobile allowance, as the guild has proposed.

Negotiations will likely continue in late July or early August.

The existing two-year contract expired last August, but the provisions remain in effect during discussions on a new agreement.

 

 

 

 

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Michael Applegate

Pacific Media Workers Executive Officer