Los Angeles Times

Healthcare key to Hollywood contract talks

Technical workers union is worried that rising health costs will lead to benefit cuts.

- Richard Verrier richard.verrier@ latimes.com

The largest union representi­ng Hollywood’s technical workers has begun contract negotiatio­ns with the major studios amid concerns that rising healthcare costs could lead to cuts in health and pension benefits for below-the-line crew members.

The Internatio­nal Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees — which represents more than 100,000 entertainm­ent industry workers, including cinematogr­aphers, set decorators and prop masters — on Wednesday began negotiatin­g a new contract with the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers. The current contract expires July 31.

Teamsters Local 399, which represents more than 3,000 drivers and bargains with several basic crafts unions, will also take part in the talks as part of a new bargaining alliance with IATSE.

The parties have set aside four weeks of talks, first to hash out agreements with more than a dozen crafts locals that belong to IATSE, then to negotiate the so-called Hollywood Basic Agreement, which covers issues affecting all the locals, including health and pension benefits. The latter is expected to dominate the agenda.

Like many unions, IATSE and the Teamsters face a large deficit in their health and pension plans — projected at $300 million over the next three years — because of rising medical costs. The health and pension plans are funded by residual payments and employer contributi­ons.

How to close that gap will be a major focus of the negotiatio­ns, as it was in contract talks with talent unions that received increases in employer contributi­ons to their plans. Union leaders could agree to raise eligibilit­y requiremen­ts as they did in in 2009 — when they raised to 400 from 300 the minimum number of hours that members must required to work over a six-month period. That change, however, sparked a backlash among some IATSE members.

Union leaders from IATSE and Teamsters have been prepping their members for months that they could be forced to accept some cuts to their health and pension benefits.

“Costs of care and insurance have been going up at an alarming rate for the last decade or more,” Leo Reed, president of Teamsters Local 399, said in a message to members posted on the union’s website.

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