District Council 33 Strike Day 8 with no deal
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Members of District Council 33 will start voting Monday on the tentative agreement with the city. Meanwhile, there are still concerns about trash as temporary dump sites are being phased out and residents are waiting for curbside pickup to resume.
Philadelphia's largest labor union, AFSCME District Council 33, is getting ready to cast votes to decide if a new contract will be ratified.
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, County and Municipal Employees District Council 33,
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.
Representatives for the striking AFSCME District Council 33 and Mayor Cherelle Parker's administration sat down for another round of negotiations Saturday, Day 5 of the ongoing labor strike."It's another opportunity for us to sit down,
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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
Members of District Council 33, which represents over 9,000 city workers, have walked out of negotiations for a new contract with the city, NBC10 has learned. If no contract is reached, membership ...