NY Times union members to walk out after contract talks miss deadline
15:17 JST, December 8, 2022
More than 1,100 union employees at the New York Times Co NYT.N will walk out for one day on Thursday, the union said, citing the company’s “failure to bargain in good faith,” after setting a deadline for a contract last week.
The union, part of the NewsGuild of New York, had set a deadline for a contract for midnight Dec. 8.
The 24-hour walkout will mark the first time New York Times employees have participated in a work stoppage since the early 1980sandcomes amid a growing labor movement across the United States in which employees from companies such as Amazon AMZN.O, Starbucks Corp SBUX.O and Apple Inc AAPL.O have organized in an effort to push back against what they say are unfair labor practices.
“Today we were ready to work for as long as it took to reach a fair deal, but management walked away from the table with five hours to go,” the New York Times union tweeted on Wednesday.
The New York Times issued a statement confirming the strike. “It is disappointing that they are taking such an extreme action when we are not at an impasse,” the company said.
In the media industry, journalists at the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, owned by Block Communications Inc, and the McClatchy-owned Fort Worth Star-Telegram are currently on open-ended strikes.
On Nov. 4 over 200 union journalists across 14 Gannett-owned news outlets – including the Desert Sun in California and New Jersey’s Asbury Park Press – participated in a one-day strike.
In August, nearly 300 Thomson Reuters Corp TRI.TO journalists in the United States, also represented by the NewsGuild of New York, staged a 24-hour strike as the union negotiates with the company for a new three-year contract.
The Times Guild represents journalists as well as ad sales workers, comment moderators, news assistants, security guards and staffers at The Times Center, the company’s events venue and virtual production studio.
Tech employees of the Times voted last March to unionize and have been trying separately to negotiate their first contract.
"News Services" POPULAR ARTICLE
-
British Rock Band Oasis to Reunite for 2025 Tour
-
China Stops Foreign Adoptions of its Children After Three Decades
-
TikTok’s Keith Lee Says D.C. Dining Is Too Boozy. Insiders Disagree.
-
Pope Opens Asia Odyssey with Stop in Indonesia to Rally Catholics, Hail Religious Freedom Tradition
-
Nippon Steel, US Steel Send Letter to Biden on Merger Plans
JN ACCESS RANKING
- Philippines Steps Up Defense of Northernmost Province with Eye on Possible Contingency Involving Taiwan
- Insufficient Rice Supply Hits Japan; Sever Heat, Rising Demand from Inbound Tourist Among Factors
- Tokyo Companies Prepare for Ashfall From Mt. Fuji Eruption; Disposal Of Ash, Possibly at Sea, A Major Challenge
- Shizuoka Pref. City Offers Foreigners Free Japanese Language Classes; Aims to Raise Non-Natives to Daily Conversation Level
- Strong Typhoon Shanshan Predicted to Approach Western, Eastern Japan Earliest on Wednesday