San Diego Union-Tribune

BNSF TRIES TO BLOCK WORKERS FROM STRIKING

Railroad wants judge to weigh in on union walkout next month

- BY JOSH FUNK Funk writes for The Associated Press.

BNSF railroad wants a federal judge to prevent two of its unions from going on strike next month over a new attendance policy that would penalize employees for missing work.

The Fort Worth, Texasbased railroad went to court after the Brotherhoo­d of Locomotive Engineers and Trainmen, and the Transporta­tion Division of the Internatio­nal Associatio­n of Sheet Metal, Air, Rail, and Transporta­tion union both threatened to strike over the new policy that is set to go into effect on Feb. 1.

The unions said they are surveying their 17,000 members who work for BNSF to see if workers will support a strike.

The heads of the two unions, BLET National President Dennis Pierce and SMART-TD President Jeremy Ferguson, said in a joint statement that the new policy would violate their contracts with BNSF and could provide an incentive for workers to show up when they are sick in the middle of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

“This unpreceden­ted

BNSF policy repudiates direct and clear contract language, and in applicatio­n, will attempt to force our members to report for duty without regard for their medical condition as we struggle to come out of a pandemic,” Pierce and Ferguson said.

The railroad maintains that this issue is a minor dispute that the unions wouldn’t be allowed to strike over under federal law, and a strike shouldn’t be allowed

because it would hurt the economy too much.

“Rail strikes — even if brief or localized — can cause devastatin­g and irreparabl­e harm to carriers, their customers, other railroads, and the general public. The threatened strike in this case would strain an already overburden­ed supply chain, potentiall­y causing wide-ranging harm to the national economy,” BNSF said in its lawsuit.

BNSF said it hasn’t updated

its attendance policy in 20 years, so it came up with the system to give its employees an easier way to see where they stand.

A hearing will be held Monday to determine whether the judge will block the threatened strike.

BNSF, one of the nation’s largest railroads, operates 32,500 miles of track in 28 western states.

 ?? MATT BROWN AP ?? Two unions said they are surveying their 17,000 members who work for BNSF to see if workers will support a strike over an attendance policy.
MATT BROWN AP Two unions said they are surveying their 17,000 members who work for BNSF to see if workers will support a strike over an attendance policy.

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