I've tried to
remain calm during all of this and I've tried to look at both sides of this
destructive dispute since I have friends on both sides of the table. But
now I'm irritated. Here's a paragraph
from yesterday's New York Times with a quote from Bruce Cohen, the spokesperson
for Local 1: “They want
all this great flexibility after a performance,” Mr. Cohen said. “They
want us to work one hour, two hours, three hours after a performance. We
want to go home and make our train. We live in the suburbs, and we want to make
the last train out of Penn Station, and they don’t seem to recognize that.” Mr. Cohen . .
. are you really saying that the League should take into consideration where a
person CHOOSES to live when negotiating a collective contract? And are
you really making a sweeping generalization suggesting that all of your members
live in the suburbs (I know a few that live on the Upper West Side that might
disagree with you). You want to make your train??? What the .
. . If a person
wants to live in the city, outside the city, or in a box in Sri Lanka, that
is his or her choice, and to state that the contract governing his employ
should recognize his CHOICE is just absurd. You know what makes me more upset
(And Local 1 members should be just as upset)? The fact that Mr. Cohen is
a spokesperson. He's a press rep. He should be a lot smarter than
this.
Can you imagine what the Local would say if the Producers had said that they
needed to make their train to their house in the suburbs?
What's next . . . is Mr. Cohen going to a make gross generalization suggesting
that Local 1 members choose to drive SUVs and therefore require more money for
gas? Or that they choose high protein diets so they need more money
to pay for steaks? Or that Local 1 members like collecting Faberge
eggs? All of these are absurd fabrications on my part . . . yet all are lifestyle
choices that have nothing to do with an employer's obligation to an employee.
If I don't want to commute to work, then I must move closer to work. If I
want a more suburban lifestyle, then I have to commute to work. If I want to
raise pigs in my spare time, then I have to wake up early and pay for
slop. Or . . . I can change jobs to fit the lifestyle that I want.
I have that choice. Simple.
Recent Comments