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National
Paper Bargaining |

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History
of NPB
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A Meeting is Coming in
August 2009
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Please copy Pulp Truth front and back and distribute it
during non-work time using your Contract Action Teams, steward system or
Rapid Response network. Be sure to leave copies in lunchrooms, break rooms,
etc. We want to hear whatʼs happening in your workplace. Send your news
to lbaker@usw.org
Special Edition September 2008
Solidarity Works! Three-and-a-half Years of Success in
Paper
As summer draws to a close, we recap and celebrate the
resounding success we’ve had in paper bargaining. We’ve
achieved this success despite overwhelming odds in an
industry that has seen unprecedented change because of mergers and
acquisitions; the emergence of China and Russia’s insatiable demand for
fiber to supply world-class paper machines that produce paper that is
exported and illegally dumped on our shores; the rise of paper
imports; a weakening economy; an increase in electronic communications; and
high energy and transportation costs.
Our members’ solidarity, increased communication and
mobilization made our victories possible. Successorship, otherwise
known as a contract protection clause, has been the backbone of our success.
When a successorship provision is in our contracts, your job, wages,
benefits and workplace rights stay in place if your mill or converter is
sold.
Without this provision and the power of our membership and
union, our sector would have been in shambles.
IP Successorship
National paper bargaining started taking off in 2005 when
just months after the merger, USW International President Leo W. Gerard met
with CEO John Faraci of International Paper (IP), the industry’s largest
player. Through these discussions and the persistence of our members, we
achieved a major breakthrough: Successorship for IP’s 14 mills.
This marked a significant change in collective bargaining
and labor relations at IP where disputes and conflict had been the norm for
years. The successorship clause quickly paid off when IP sold its
coated free sheet assets to private equity and other firms. Two of the sold
mills in Sartell, Minn., and Bucksport, Maine, were purchased by a private
equity firm and are now known as Verso Paper. By having successorship, the
Verso mills were able to build on their contracts in subsequent bargaining
in 2007 and obtain a common expiration date, which builds true bargaining
power.
Smurfit-Stone Container Successorship
When Smurfit-Stone was looking to spin off assets as well,
our union moved to protect our members by securing successorship for the
company’s transactions with private equity firm, Texas Pacific Group, and
Kapstone. During these negotiations, a pattern for successorship agreements
was reached that immediately covered all USW-represented workers employed by
Smurfit-Stone. It was also agreed that the health care coverage workers had
in 2005 would apply to contracts negotiated in 2005-08.
“In today’s time, it is not so much about making
progress on health care as it is in making sure we hold the line on health
care and not go back,” said Smurfit-Stone worker Eddie Wingfield. With
national paper bargaining (NPB), you feel more confident you won’t go into
a contract bargaining situation and come out with less than the NPB goals.”
Stora Enso Global
Agreement
After over 21 months of bargaining, all contracts with Stora
Enso were open or near expiration. This created the pressure necessary to
getting the first global contract of its kind in the paper sector. A common
expiration date and successorship were obtained, which proved important when
NewPage, owned by private equity firm Cerberus, bought Stora Enso. NewPage
has to now honor the global agreement, which includes job security, gain
sharing of profits, industry-leading wages, and pension and health care
provisions. The common expiration dates enable the former Stora Enso mills
to bargain from a position of power with
NewPage.
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Landmark IP Agreement
As part of the ongoing discussions with IP that the IP
membership approved and endorsed, a landmark global agreement on economic
and job security issues was reached for the company’s 14 USW-represented
mills. IP mill membership overwhelmingly ratified the agreement, which
included a method of funding retiree health care benefits that was worth
millions of dollars. Successorship was expanded to the 14 mills, health care
was secured, and the pension multiplier was increased to $50 in an industry
where employers are demanding 401k plans instead of a guaranteed pension.
The global agreement also allows for local contracts and bargaining to
remain in place; no changes can be made to those local agreements without
the approval of the locals’ membership. “We did away with IP’s
ability to adjust our insurance, and the global agreement also left us the
autonomy to negotiate our contract on local items,” said Randy Burkett, an
IP member at the Cantonment, Fla., mill. “Job security in today’s world
is something unheard of to get. With the power of 14 mills and coordinated
bargaining, we were able to secure our jobs.”
IP Converters Get
Protection Too
The IP discussions then proceeded to a global agreement
covering over 30 IP converters—the largest agreement of its kind ever in
the paper industry. Successorship was obtained; the wage pattern was
improved by 100%; the workers got the best pension multiplier in the
converter sector; and the PPO active medical health care plan cannot be
changed unless the union agrees to it. Local unions maintained their ability
to negotiate local issues, and management will not be able to force changes
to the contract without the local’s approval. The master agreement also
restricts reduction in the converter work force to volunteers or attrition
except during temporary layoffs and partial or complete closures.
Weyerhaeuser Workers Get Job Protection
Upon hearing that Weyerhaeuser might sell its containerboard
packaging and recycling business, the Weyerhaeuser council immediately
pursued a deal for the industry pattern successorship clause. Besides
immediately getting this clause in their contracts, workers also got longer
term deals in exchange for substantial wage increases that would preserve
their contracts for a longer period of time in the event of a sale. This
move paid off when IP bought Weyerhaeuser’s assets, and the transition was
seamless for over 2,800 USW-represented Weyerhaeuser employees.
“The Weyerhaeuser council knew successorship was an
important issue, and little did we realize eight months later that
successorship language was going to be the most important thing we
negotiated,” said Weyerhaeuser council president Robert Tapp. “The one
great benefit was we didn’t have to reapply for our jobs. I have seen in
other facilities where workers did not have that successorship clause and
they had to either reapply for their jobs or start over with a new owner at
less pay. The day of the Weyerhaeuser-IP transaction was business as usual.”
Grassroots Solidarity Results in Domtar Agreement
Grassroots solidarity in bargaining for all locations at one
table helped the Domtar council secure an umbrella master agreement covering
economic and job security issues. The deal locked in members’ health care
coverage for the remainder of the current local union agreements and the
next four-year local contracts. Besides obtaining an increase in the pension
multiplier by $5 in the first year of each contract, Domtar workers also got
successorship language to protect their jobs and contracts in case their
facilities are sold.
Global Agreement Reached for PCA Mills
In mid-August, the USW reached a global agreement with
Packaging Corporation of America (PCA) that covers over 1,200 workers at the
company’s four mills. This five-year agreement provides important
employment security provisions, immediate successorship language, the best
wage increases in the paper sector, a $6 per year of service pension
increase that immediately is put in place and the best health care in the
paper sector that is locked in until 2013 and 2015 in some cases. This
deal paves the way for a global agreement with the PCA converters.
Local union members enthusiastically endorsed all these
deals, with ratification votes well over 80%in every case.
Taking the Offense in Health and Safety
Working in the paper sector can be hazardous. Arms are
caught in paper machines; workers’ heads are scalped in converter
operations. Workers are killed in devastating explosions, such as the one at
IP’s Vicksburg, Miss., mill and the more recent explosion at PCA’s
Tomahawk mill that killed three. To change the way our union and the
paper industry approach
health and safety in the paper workplace, we have sent out
to local union mill officers a survey that is the first of its kind.
We are trying to
gauge what is being done at the mills regarding health and safety and what
is needed to support local union
leaders, rank-and-file members and the communities in which they work.
To make sure every mill returns its survey, the deadline has
just been extended until September 19.
An
analysis of the results will be done, a report issued and a health and
safety plan created. Our goal is to push for changes in and better
regulation of the paper
industry.
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