Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Boston’s Museum of Fine Arts reaches labor deal with workers

- By Mark Pratt

BOSTON (AP) — Employees at Boston’s Museum of Fine Arts ratified their first labor deal Tuesday, becoming the latest prestigiou­s art institutio­n to protect workers with a union contract.

The collective bargaining agreement is the first since museum workers voted to join the United Auto Workers Local 2110 in November 2020, the union and management said in a joint statement.

“We are pleased to have reached an agreement on a union contract with the MFA that will provide a more equitable compensati­on structure and a democratic voice for the staff,” union President Maida Rosenstein said in the statement. “By establishi­ng collective bargaining rights, the MFA staff is helping to bring about necessary systemic change for museum workers in general.”

The union represents 227 of the museum’s administra­tive, technical, curatorial and conservati­on employees.

The agreement raises wages and minimum pay rates. Workers will receive at least a 5% increase on July 1, with some workers getting larger increases. Wages will be increased again by 3% on July 1, 2023, and again by 3% on July 1, 2024.

The Museum has estimated the total cost of the changes in wages to be 13.5% over the threeyear term of the contract.

The New York-based UAW Local 2110 represents workers at dozens of cultural and educationa­l institutio­ns, including the Museum of Modern Art in New York and the Portland Museum of Art in Maine.

When the coronaviru­s pandemic hit, museums were forced to shut down and lay off workers, and many employees realized they had few legal protection­s, said Tom Juravich, a professor of sociology and labor studies at the University of Massachuse­tts Amherst.

The Museum of Fine Arts eliminated more than 100 jobs early in the pandemic, about half through voluntary early retirement­s and

half through layoffs, according to a statement at the time.

Museums have treated their rank-and-file employees as little more than servants for years, and more workers have been unionizing as attitudes change among younger employees, especially, Juravich said.

“There’s a new generation moving into the field, and they are not impressed by the prestige of simply working at the finest cultural institutio­ns in the world, they need to pay the bills,” he said, pointing out that many likely have advanced degrees and substantia­l student loans.

Juravich said it’s also difficult to justify working for subsistenc­e wages when museum leadership is paid handsomely, and many museum boards of trustees are filled with society’s wealthiest elite.

The MFA’s unionized workers held a one-day strike last November to protest what they said were stalled contract negotiatio­ns. The museum, which has about 500,000 pieces of art and draws more than 1 million visitors per year, stayed open during the strike.

The museum said in addition to enhanced benefits for union workers, it has committed additional investment­s in compensati­on and benefits for all employees in the next three years.

“Our employees make the MFA what it is; they ensure the highest care for the treasures that we hold in trust for future generation­s as we strive to be a museum for all of Boston,” museum Director Matthew Teitelbaum said.

 ?? AP PHOTO/JOSH REYNOLDS, FILE ?? FILE - Museum curator Victoria Bunting, center, pickets in front of the Museum of Fine Arts on Nov. 17, 2021, in Boston.
AP PHOTO/JOSH REYNOLDS, FILE FILE - Museum curator Victoria Bunting, center, pickets in front of the Museum of Fine Arts on Nov. 17, 2021, in Boston.

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