Waste Management workers in King, Snohomish counties strike

Waste Management workers in King, Snohomish counties strike »Play Video
(AP Photo/Ted S. Warren)
SEATTLE -- Dozens of Waste Management workers hit the picket lines on Wednesday, leaving many in the area unsure whether their pickup service would be interrupted.

Local Teamsters spokesman Paul Zilly said 153 yard waste and recycling drivers from King and Snohomish counties went on strike at 10 a.m.

The Teamsters said members had been working without a contract since May 31, and had voted to authorize a strike on June 2.

"The last thing we want is a strike, but Waste Management is using illegal bullying tactics to threaten our livelihood," said Brent Barrett, a Waste Management yard waste driver, in a statement released by the union.

The union said the National Labor Relations Board is investigating Waste Management for a number of alleged violations, including "bad-faith bargaining, coercing and direct dealing with its employees, threatening to retaliate against workers, and unilaterally changing working conditions."

However, a spokesperson for the company said Waste Management has tried times over to offer the workers a deal they would find acceptable.

Robin Freedman, the company's director of communications, said the two sides have been negotiating for the past four months, and the company has put forward 16 different proposals. The "last, best and final offer" was a 6-year contract that included an average annual pay of $98,000, a fully-funded employee pension and "a generous health and welfare benefits package," she said.

"Unfortunately, the union didn't like the final best offer, because they never even took it to the workers, to the members for them to take a look and vote on it," said Freedman. "We were truly hoping the union leadership would give the membership an opportunity to vote."

It was not immediately clear which part of the proposal the union found unacceptable. The two sides held their last negotiation meeting last month, Freedman said, but the proposal has been on the table for "quite some time."

The company's garbage truck drivers were not among those on strike; however, the union said those workers' contracts allow them to strike in solidarity. It was not immediately clear whether those workers would choose to exercise that option.

Waste Management said customers whose bins were not emptied as scheduled on Wednesday are urged to put out a double load next week at no extra cost.

"If you have not received recycling and yard waste pickup services today, you will not receive any," Freedman said.

All customers are urged to put out their bins on their regularly scheduled days.

"We will go on operating," said Freedman.

The company said if the strike continues for days, the company will implement its strike contingency plan, which prioritizes critical customers associated with public health including hospitals, nursing homes and daycare centers.

Both residential and commercial customers can check Waste Management's website for any changes or delays to their service.