W.Va. Communications Workers Union Leader Surprised, Pleased With Tentative Frontier Contract Agreement

Now heading to a rank and file vote, the tentative four-year contract agreement reached Saturday between the Communications Workers of America and Frontier Communications covers about 1,400 mostly West Virginia based employees.

Now heading to a rank and file vote, the tentative four-year contract agreement reached Saturday between the Communications Workers of America and Frontier Communications covers about 1,400 mostly West Virginia based employees. 

CWA Local 2001 President J.D. Thompson said he thinks hard work and employee diligence contributed to the positive outcome.

“Our bargaining committee put in long, hard hours,” Thompson said. “And the employees around the state who participated in mobilization and just keeping the public aware, we were in it for the long haul.”

Thompson said he appreciates that the contract maintains health benefits, includes wage increases, and – with $1.2 billion coming to the state for broadband expansion – keeps all-important job security provisions. 

“A large part of our membership is covered by a no layoff provision,” Thompson said. “With the fiber work that’s coming in, it maintains that Frontier workers, union workers, will be the ones getting the lion’s share of that work.”

A Frontier Communications spokesperson released this statement:

“We have been working constructively with CWA and are pleased to have reached a tentative agreement that is good for our employees, our customers and our business. We recognize the critical importance of our communications services to West Virginia. Our goal throughout the negotiations process has been to continue to provide our employees with some of the best jobs in the state, while enabling us to successfully operate our business for years to come. This agreement accomplishes that.” 

Thompson said contract details should be sent out to the membership within the next couple of days.

“And then, shortly thereafter, we’ll be doing the vote with membership to either accept it or decline it,” he said. “We’re hoping to have everything wrapped up by the 29th of September.”

W.Va. Amtrak Stations Set To Reopen Friday Following Labor Agreement

Pending the contract’s final approval, rail workers won the right to attend appointments like doctors’ visits and family emergencies without punishment from their employers. Workers will also earn a 24 percent wage increase through 2024.

Rail companies and union leaders reached a tentative agreement Thursday preventing a nationwide strike.

Pending the contract’s final approval, rail workers won the right to attend appointments like doctors’ visits and family emergencies without punishment from their employers. Workers will also earn a 24 percent wage increase through 2024.

Teamsters General President Sean O’Brien said in a statement following the agreement, “Collective bargaining works. The labor movement works. And we know through lifetimes of experience and unbelievable sacrifice, Teamsters across America’s railroads work harder than anyone.”

Maryland Area Regional Commuter (MARC) trains run by the Maryland Department of Transportation faced suspension due to the labor conflict. MARC trains that run from Martinsburg into Washington, D.C. run on tracks owned by CSX Transportation.

Long-haul Amtrak trains across the U.S. were previously suspended in anticipation of the potential strike. These include the Capitol Limited, which stops in Martinsburg and Harpers Ferry, and Cardinal, which stops in the New River Gorge, Charleston and Huntington.

“This tentative agreement will keep our trains moving, stations bustling, and employees proudly serving customers as we move them across this great country,” Amtrak CEO Stephen Gardner said in a statement.

An advisory notice by Amtrak says they are “working to quickly restore canceled trains and reaching out directly to impacted customers.”

W.Va. Unemployment, Labor Force Participation Numbers Both Low

West Virginia had a 3.7% unemployment rate for March – making it a six-month run of the lowest unemployment numbers in state history.West Virginia’s labor force participation numbers, however, remain among the lowest in the country at 55%. That’s 7% below the national average.That means nearly half of West Virginia’s eligible population is not working or even trying to find a job.

West Virginia had a 3.7 percent unemployment rate for March – making it a six-month run of the lowest unemployment numbers in state history.

West Virginia’s labor force participation numbers, however, remain among the lowest in the country at 55 percent. That’s 7 percent below the national average.

That means nearly half of West Virginia’s eligible population is not working or even trying to find a job.

Acting WorkForce West Virginia Commissioner Scott Adkins said one factor to the problem is more than 13 percent of the eligible labor force works in neighboring states. The national average is just 3.1 percent for neighboring state laborers.

Adkins said the key factor is that the labor numbers in the 16 to 24-year-old age group are far from where they should be.

“Thirty percent of all graduating seniors do not have a career plan, they are not going to higher education,”Adkins said. “They are not going to technical school. They don’t have a job, and they are not joining the military.”

Adkins said there are organized efforts underway from government, business and education groups to get more eligible West Virginians to work, especially those in that 16 to 24-year-old age group.

LISTEN: Author Wiley Cash on Novel 'The Last Ballad'

Author Wiley Cash is the 2017 Appalachian Heritage Writer-in-Residence at Shepherd University. His newest novel The Last Ballad will be released October 3. Cash sat down with reporter Liz McCormick to discuss his latest work, which centers on union leader and balladeer Ella May Wiggins, who died during the Loray Mill Strike in Gastonia, North Carolina in 1929.

Cash received this year’s Appalachian Heritage Writer’s Award, which is presented by the West Virginia Center for the book and Shepherd University.

Cash’s first novel A Land More Kind Than Home, published in 2012, was chosen as the 2017 ‘One Book, One West Virginia’s Common Read for the State’ by the Center for the Book. Cash is also author of This Dark Road to Mercy, published in 2014.

Cash was born September 7, 1977, in Fayetteville, North Carolina. He holds a B.A. degree from the University of North Carolina, Asheville, an M.A. from the University of North Carolina, Greensboro, and a Ph.D. from the University of Louisiana, Lafayette.

He is a teacher in the Mountainview Low-Residency MFA Program in Creative Writing at Southern New Hampshire University, and he currently serves as writer-in-residence at the University of North Carolina, Asheville.

Cash lives with his wife and two young daughters in Wilmington, North Carolina.

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