Earlier this year, JetBlue replaced the contractor that cleans its cabins at Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport.
One of the workers who
was displaced was evicted from her apartment, while another couldn't
afford rent. Six others are still waiting for more than $10,000 in lost
wages.
According to a
spokesperson for the Union that protects these workers, all of the above
could have been prevented if ReadyJet -- the Boston-based company that
JetBlue replaced Superior Aircraft Services with -- followed a new
Workers' Retention Policy passed by Broward County Commissioners in
January.
The policy calls for a 45-day period of "continued employment when one airline contractor is replaced with another."
Seven of the eight
employees affected have since been rehired but are still seeking weeks
of missed pay; one, Sonia Welsh is finishing her 14th week of
unemployment.
Julie Karant, a regional
communications officer for the Service Employees International Union
(SEIU), says that Broward County should now enforce its own law. She is
asking county commissioners to pull ReadyJet's permit to operate in the
airport.
"We're not daring. This
is not a game. We want ReadyJet to follow the rules," Karant says.
"These are substandard company practices and somebody should teach them a
lesson...these are third-world conditions being imposed by the airline
industry."
An invoice for the lost
wages was hand-delivered by a crowd of union members on Thursday Oct.
30. It follows months of complaints filed by the Service Employees
International Union (SEIU); the first one was on July 16. In a follow-up
complaint on Aug. 26, the SEIU asked the County Aviation Director to
pay the workers what ReadyJet owes them, and asked that Welsh be allowed
to work.
Read more here: http://blogs.browardpalmbeach.com
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