A Majority of Drivers,
Dockworkers Take Step To Gain Strong Voice At Work
January 16, 2008
(Washington, D.C.) – A
majority of workers at seven UPS Freight terminals throughout New England have
signed authorization cards to become Teamsters, providing strong momentum in the
nationwide campaign to give thousands of company employees a strong voice on the
job, Teamsters General President Jim Hoffa announced.
The cards will now be sent
to a neutral arbitrator, paving the way for the company to officially recognize
the 315 workers, which is expected to occur within a week. The workers belong to
the following local unions: Local 25 in Boston; Local 170 in Worcester,
Massachusetts, Local 251 in E. Providence, Rhode Island; Local 340 in S.
Portland, Maine; Local 404 in Springfield, Massachusetts; Local 443 in New
Haven, Connecticut, and Local 633 in Manchester, New Hampshire.
“UPS Freight workers in
New England have taken the next step in our campaign to help thousands of UPS
Freight workers have a brighter future,” Hoffa said.
“Our New England local
union leaders, led by Local 633 Secretary-Treasurer and Joint Council 10
Secretary-Treasurer Dave Laughton and Local 25 President Sean O’Brien, worked
closely together to make this next phase of the UPS Freight campaign a success,”
said Ken Hall, Director of the Teamsters Package Division, who is overseeing the
campaign. “These local unions followed the process we have established to make
this campaign successful, and soon the New England employees will join their
coworkers in Indianapolis in getting a contract that addresses their concerns
about fair wages, improved health care and pensions.”
This past October, workers
at UPS Freight (formerly Overnite Transportation) in Indianapolis overwhelmingly
ratified their first contract ever, an agreement that improved wages, benefits
and working conditions and which served as a model to organize thousands of
other UPS Freight employees nationwide.
Founded in 1903, the
International Brotherhood of Teamsters represents 1.4-million hardworking men
and women in the United States and Canada.