
by Bay City News
Members of BART's largest labor union voted Monday to approve aΒ contract agreement with management, ending nine months of labor strife thatΒ included two strikes.
Eighty-seven percent of voting members of Service Employees UnionΒ Local 1021, which represents 1,430 mechanics, custodians and clericalΒ workers, voted to approve the contract, according to SEIU 1021 spokeswomanΒ Cecille Isidro.
The agreement, which was reached on Dec. 21, was approved by BARTΒ directors on Jan. 2 and by members of Amalgamated Transit Union Local 1555,Β which represents 945 station agents, train operators and foreworkers, theΒ following day.
In approving the agreement, BART directors said it isn't perfectΒ but they believe it is a reasonable compromise because it requires employeesΒ to accept new workplace rules that will make the transit agency moreΒ productive and efficient.
The agreement resolved a dispute over a paid family medical leaveΒ provision that management said had been inserted into a previous tentativeΒ agreement by mistake.Β The new agreement doesn't include paid family medical leave butΒ does expand paid time off for bereavement leave to include deaths ofΒ grandchildren or stepparents of a spouse or domestic partner.
The new contract also calls for the construction of break rooms inΒ the Daly City, Millbrae and West Oakland stations and allows qualifyingΒ employees more flexibility in how they pay for the costs of their familyΒ medical leave, plus additional administrative changes to the contract.Β Contract talks between BART and its union began onΒ April 1Β andΒ workers staged short strikes in July and October.
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