Los Angeles Times

SAG-AFTRA to request strike authorizat­ion

- By David Ng david.ng@latimes.com

In a sign of rising labor tensions, SAG-AFTRA is seeking a strike authorizat­ion from its members as it continues to negotiate a new three-year contract with the major studios.

The actors union said in a message to members that the two sides have failed to reach a tentative contract agreement after the studios proposed “outrageous” rollbacks. SAG-AFTRA said its national board of directors agreed Sunday to send a strike authorizat­ion referendum to members unless a satisfacto­ry agreement is reached by Friday’s contract deadline.

The studios have “failed to make sufficient progress on our most critical issues,” the guild’s leaders said in a message posted to its website Sunday night. “The status quo is simply unacceptab­le and our members, standing together, will not give in to management’s onerous demands nor back down on our critical proposals.”

SAG-AFTRA is negotiatin­g the contract with the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers, the trade associatio­n that represents the major Hollywood studios, broadcast networks and certain cable channels.

The AMPTP declined to comment, citing a media blackout for the negotiatio­ns.

A strike authorizat­ion vote doesn’t mean a strike will happen. The move is a common tactic used by unions to gain leverage in a negotiatio­n. In April, members of the Writers Guild of America voted to authorize a strike in its negotiatio­ns with the AMPTP. But the union avoided a strike by reaching an agreement with studios in May.

SAG-AFTRA was formed in 2012 with the merger of the two rival guilds. The combined organizati­on is Hollywood’s largest union and boasts membership of approximat­ely 160,000 individual­s.

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