Janitors and security officers in the Twin Cities are expected to vote Saturday to authorize a strike if negotiators for their union and their employers fail to reach agreements.
More than 6,000 workers are seeking higher wages and more affordable health care in separate contract talks as the Service Employees International Union (SEIU) negotiates with contract maintenance firms that clean and provide security for some of the metro area's largest companies.
SEIU Local 26 members are employed by contractors who service some high-profile corporate buildings including Target Corp., Medtronic, Wells Fargo Center, Wells Fargo Mortgage and U.S. Bancorp Bank Plaza.
A strike could have a significant impact because this is the first time that both the union's janitors and security officer contracts expired at the same time, said Kate Brickman, media relations manager for the SEIU Minnesota State Council. The SEIU members have been working without a contract since Dec. 31 while negotiating in separate bargaining committees, according to Local 26. The strike authorization vote would give the bargaining committees the power to call a strike.
"We simply believe that those who clean and protect these multimillion dollar properties should be treated fairly and should be able to make a living and support their families," SEIU Local 26 President Javier Morillo said Tuesday at a news conference at the downtown Minneapolis Hilton.
The union says the contractor side of the table has been less than cooperative.
"Our members have been ready to come to the table for months, looking for improvements in our contract. Yet our employers just want to step backwards," said Fred Anthony II, who is a security officer at the Ecolab headquarters in St. Paul and a member of the security officer bargaining committee. "They don't want to bargain in good faith. They really just seem like they want to gut our union."
David Duddleston, a spokesman for the security contractors including American Security, AlliedBarton and Securitas, said the employers have offered a number of dates and the parties have agreed to some but not all of them.