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Sorry, rats. The “Parker piles” are about to disappear. Philadelphia’s first major city workers strike since 1986 lasted ...
AFSCME District Council 33, representing more than 9,000 city employees from dispatchers to sanitation, was on strike for ...
A union representing thousands of city workers in Philadelphia and the city have reached a deal to end a more than weeklong ...
A tentative agreement has put a stop to the piles of trash left by striking sanitation workers, but whether union members ...
Philadelphia's largest municipal union reaches tentative deal with Mayor Cherelle Parker, ending 8-day strike affecting 9,000 ...
The members of District Council 33 headed back to work on Thursday, but say they're frustrated with the tentative contract ...
District Council 33 and the Parker administration last negotiated for hours on Saturday, but the two sides weren't able to ...
The city workers' strike in Philadelphia is set to end after the city and the union reached a tentative agreement, Mayor ...
Philadelphia's largest labor union, AFSCME District Council 33, is getting ready to cast votes to decide if a new contract will be ratified.
The strike was a sign of growing social opposition, which is developing into a confrontation with the corporate oligarchy.
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The Parker administration won a series of court injunctions requiring striking 911 dispatchers, airport dispatchers, and ...