FUR FLIES!
Inflatable cat scares off union u rat
The iconic balloon rat, deployed by unions to protest at construction si tes around the city, has met its match. The owners of an East 42nd Street building put out a giant cat — which chased off the rabble-rouser.
Now that’s pest control! A Midtown building owner figured out the perfect way to chase off the inflatable rats that plague allegedly anti-union Big Apple construction sites — by letting loose an even bigger inflatable cat.
A union that got shut out of a lucrative façade-renovation job set up the rat across from Grand Central Terminal in protest against contractor MDB Development Corp.
But the building’s corporate owner, the Empire State Realty Trust, brought in its own feline balloon to overshadow the vermin, according to sources familiar with the matter.
The placid-looking, brown-andwhite tabby towered over the redeyed rat, which appeared impotent despite its bared fangs and claws.
Members of Local 1 of the Bricklayers and Allied Craftworkers union quickly turned tail, deflating their rat and scurrying away.
“It was pretty hilarious,” said a banker who works in a nearby building. “The cat went right up to the scaffolding. It could have easily kicked that rat’s ass.”
The cat was purchased on orders from a top exec at Empire State Realty who insisted it be “taller than the rat,” sources said.
Inflatable rats are typically used to protest the hiring of nonunion workers, a practice deemed legal by the National Labor Rela-
BEASTS OF BURDEN: Ferocious-looking it isn’t, but the pumpedup feline at right still managed to frighten off a scaredy-cat rat put up by union protesters who had lost out on a renovation job on 42nd Street. tions Board in 2011.
But Local 1’s picket line outside One Grand Central Place stems from a long-simmering turf war with a rival labor group, Local 339 of the United Service Workers Union, which scored the contract with MDB, sources said.
Local 1 previously protested in front of the building with the rat on Thursday, according to several neighborhood workers.
Big Sky Balloons & Searchlights of Plainfield, Ill., designed the first inflatable nylon rat in 1990 for a Chicago union that reportedly complained the initial design wasn’t “mean enough.”
The company currently offers several models of “Scabby the Rat” in different colors and sizes ranging from 6 to 25 feet tall.
It was unclear where Empire State Realty got its cat, but Big Sky founder Mike O’Connor told The New Yorker in 2000 that he once sold a giant cat — “actually a cougar, but it looked like a cat” — to a bank that similarly deployed it against protesters with a balloon rat.
Neither of the unions, MDB nor Empire State Realty returned requests for comment.