| |
Detroit
water
system
employees
strike
By DAVID
N.
GOODMAN
Associated
Press
DETROIT
-
Employees
of
Detroit's
water
and
sewer
system,
which
serves
four in
10
Michigan
residents,
went on
strike
Sunday
to
protest
plans to
eliminate
most of
their
jobs
through
privatization
or other
measures.
The
union
for 950
employees
of the
Detroit
Water
and
Sewerage
Department
said its
members
went on
strike
about 10
a.m.
Sunday,
setting
up a
picket
line at
a
wastewater
treatment
plant in
southwest
Detroit's
Delray
neighborhood.
Michigan
law
prohibits
public
worker
strikes,
and
American
Federation
of State
County
and
Municipal
Employees
Local
207 said
it
expects
Mayor
Dave
Bing's
administration
to seek
a
back-to-work
order.
"Workers
are very
happy to
be
fighting
for a
change,"
said
Michael
Muholland,
secretary-treasurer
of
American
Federation
of State
County
and
Municipal
Employees
Local
207.
"Detroit
has been
taking
it in
the neck
for so
long."
Bing
spokesman
Robert
Warfield
said
city
officials
would
discuss
the
strike
Sunday
afternoon
but had
no
immediate
comment.
Detroit's
water
system
serves
about 4
million
people
in
southeastern
Michigan.
Proposed
job cuts
in the
Detroit
water
system
follow
an April
agreement
between
Bing and
Gov.
Rick
Snyder
to head
off a
state
takeover
of the
city's
finances
because
of
persistent
budget
deficits.
After
the
agreement,
Bing
said a
majority
of the
water
department's
about
2,000
employees
could
lose
their
jobs. A
plan
unveiled
by the
Bing
administration
Aug. 8
would
cut the
number
of
department
employees
to about
375 over
five
years.
About
360
outside
employees
would
work for
the
department.
Local
207
president
John
Riehl
said the
union is
seeking
broader
public
support
for what
he said
is a
fight to
preserve
the
living
standard
of
working-class
and
middle-class
families.
"We are
Detroit,"
he said
in a
statement.
"This
strike
gives
the
people
of
Detroit
a much
needed
and long
awaited
opportunity
to
change
the
balance
of power
in our
favor." |