Business & Tech

Councilman Launches Petition to Ban BART Strikes

With the threat of another BART strike looming, a councilman is pushing for legislation to ban transit workers from walking off the job.

By Bay City News

With the threat of another BART strike looming, an Orinda city councilman is pushing for legislation to ban transit workers from walking off the job.   Councilman Steve Glazer, a candidate for state Assembly and longtime advisor to Gov. Jerry Brown, launched a petition today in favor of prohibiting transit worker strikes statewide.  

He held a petition drive at the Orinda BART station this morning and was also handing out fliers at the Lafayette station during today's evening commute.    Glazer's call for a ban comes amid ongoing talks between BART management and employee unions as they negotiate a new contract.  Talks are scheduled to continue every day until Oct. 11, when a cooling-off period called for by Brown will end.  If those negotiations fail, the Bay Area could see a BART strike similar to the four-and-a-half day strike in July that grid locked regional transportation as soon as Oct. 11.

Glazer also pointed to strike bans for transit workers in cities such as New York, Chicago, Washington, D.C. and San Francisco, where public transit workers are prohibited from striking by city charter. He said he would continue to push for a ban regardless of whether BART management and union leaders reach a contract agreement. BART spokeswoman Alicia Trost decline to comment on Glazer's petition, except to say that the transit agency has historically opposed binding arbitration, which tends to accompany strike bans.

"BART has a no-strike clause in its contracts, but when the contracts expire, they can strike," she added. Cecille Isidro, a spokeswoman for Service International Union Local 1021, which represents the bulk of the workers affected by the new contract, said she had not yet heard about the petition and could not comment.


Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.

We’ve removed the ability to reply as we work to make improvements. Learn more here