New York Post

FUR FLIES!

Inflatable cat scares off union u rat

- By LOIS WEISS, STEPHANIE PAGONES and BRUCE GOLDING

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.

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