WTTW technicians to lose group health care insurance as strike against public TV station enters third week [Chicago Tribune]
As the strike by two dozen WTTW technicians enters its third week, negotiations are at a stalemate over a new labor contract, and the pressure is mounting on both sides.
On Monday, the
“One of the guys on the picket line actively has cancer, and a couple of guys have had cancer in the past,” said
In an email, WTTW said when the workers went on strike
“Health insurance coverage is reliant on employment status on the first day of each month,”
The striking IBEW workers include camera operators, graphic artists and floor crew responsible for various productions at WTTW, including the station’s signature nightly news program, “Chicago Tonight.” The employees went on strike after a year of negotiations failed to produce an agreement on a new labor contract with WTTW-Ch. 11. It is the first such strike in the 67-year history of the station.
WTTW has continued to produce a down-sized version of “Chicago Tonight” during the strike, with executive producer
Last week, Mayor
“Until WTTW-Channel 11 can come to an agreement on a fair contract, I stand in solidarity with the men and women of
“While some politicians have declined invitations for interviews, Chicago Tonight remains committed to providing news reporting, context and analysis to our viewers about the news of the day,” Maish said.
The technicians had been working without a labor contract since July, when a one-year extension of the previous four-year agreement expired. The issues are job protection and work jurisdiction, according to the union, which alleges WTTW is trying to farm out their long-standing technical duties to news producers and nonunion personnel.
WTTW said it offered the union a no-layoff guarantee and a bargaining unit minimum of 25 full-time employees for the term of the new contract, but the IBEW rejected it. The station “stands ready to return to good faith negotiations as soon as possible,” Maish said.
Cameramen and editors start at
Rizzo said while seasoned veterans can make a good living, the starting pay is so low that it’s hard to attract new technicians to work at WTTW.
“This is not the way that public television should be run. It should be run with people in mind, not corporate profits,” Rizzo said. “The top scale is a nice living wage and the bottom scale, they can’t get people in on. You can’t feed a family at that rate.”
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