PHILADELPHIA — Negotiations resumed Wednesday on the second day of a strike by nearly 10,000 city workers in Philadelphia, while a judge ordered some emergency service dispatchers and essential water department employees back to work.
''We are still very, very far apart. All this, it's not all about money, but it's largely about money, but there are a lot of work rule situations that we still have not worked through,'' Greg Boulware, District 33 president, said Wednesday morning outside a designated trash drop-off site along the Delaware River.
The union represents many of the city's blue-collar workers, from trash collectors to clerks to security guards. Police and firefighters are not on strike.
The city has suspended residential trash collection, closed some city pools and libraries and shortened recreation center hours. However, Mayor Cherelle Parker, a Democrat, has vowed to keep the city running and not disturb the Fourth of July celebrations already under way in the nation's birthplace.
A trickle of people arriving Wednesday morning at a designated trash drop-off site found themselves in the center of the labor dispute, as they encountered a few dozen striking workers lining the gates. Some turned around, while others – sometimes guided by police - drove through an open gate to deposit bags in a single idle trash truck.
''I really didn't want to pass the picket line,'' said Steven Connell, 65, who was dropping off trash for himself and an elderly neighbor. He had expected a clear path and many more receptacles.
''We're kind of conflicted,'' Connell said. ''I didn't think it would be like this.''
City leaders at a Wednesday afternoon press conference warned striking employees against vandalism, intimidation or other mischief.