Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

HarperColl­ins, striking workers agree to federal mediation

- BY HILLEL ITALIE

NEW YORK — HarperColl­ins Publishers and the union representi­ng some 250 striking employees have agreed to enter into federal mediation, the first sign of a possible settlement since the work stoppage began in early November.

“We are excited to have this opportunit­y to continue bargaining with HarperColl­ins and hope they finally are ready to put a fair offer on the table,” Olga Brudastova, president of Local 2110 UAW, said in a statement Thursday. “We have been on strike for over two months at this point. It is time for us to resolve any outstandin­g difference­s and attempt to reset our relationsh­ip.”

HarperColl­ins, owned by Rupert Murdoch’s News Corp, issued a statement saying it hoped that meeting with an outside mediator would provide “a path forward.” The publisher had not met with union negotiator­s in months.

“We entered negotiatio­ns eager to find common ground, and we have remained committed to achieving a fair and reasonable contract throughout this process,” the company’s statement reads in part. “We are hopeful that a mutually agreed upon mediator can help find the solutions that have eluded us so far. HarperColl­ins has had a union for 80 years, with a long history of successful and fair contract negotiatio­ns. The company has the exact same goal now, and is actively working to achieve it.”

HarperColl­ins and the UAW have disagreed on union protection­s, workplace diversity and wages, with the UAW asking the publisher to raise the starting salary from $45,000 to $50,000 — a range comparable to what other large New York publishers pay.

HarperColl­ins union members — who include editorial assistants, marketers and other mid- and entry-level staffers — had been working without a contract since last spring. They staged a one-day strike over the summer and walked off indefinite­ly on Nov. 10.

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