Workers who are striking the Minneapolis Park Board for the first time in the agency's 141-year history took the fight over their stalled contract negotiations to commissioners Wednesday night, demonstrating at their meeting for three hours straight until the board was forced to adjourn without getting anything done.
Commissioners Becky Alper and Tom Olsen started the meeting by attempting to amend the agenda with a resolution directing park managers to promptly settle with union workers. They asked the Park Board's negotiating team to offer Laborers Local 363 a proposal with market adjustments that union leaders have committed to accepting verbally and in writing, but without the contract takeaways the union calls "poison pills" — such as provisions to reduce the number of stewards, double probation time for new hires and make automatic seniority raises discretionary.
"This unprecedented situation diverts our attention from our primary mission: preserving, protecting‚ maintaining, improving and enhancing parks," said Alper. "Without this resolution we face as the Park Board a perilous path forward. It's one with no end in sight. It's one where we gradually crawl out of this hole while parks deteriorate, where workers' families are impacted without paychecks and dissatisfaction grows among the public."
Commissioners Alper, Olsen and Billy Menz supported amending the agenda to allow discussion of the resolution. However, Park Board President Meg Forney, Vice President Cathy Abene and Commissioners Steffanie Musich, Elizabeth Shaffer and Becka Thompson rejected the amendment (Commissioner Charles Rucker was absent).
Workers in the gallery shouted their dissatisfaction, asking why the commissioners refused to end the strike, now in its third week. The work stoppage has disrupted storm cleanup of the parks, canceled concerts at the Lake Harriet Band Shell and caused maintenance jams across the system.
The only dissenter to respond was Thompson, who said she did not understand how the contract offer described in the Alper-Olsen resolution would affect the whole system. Menz, who voted to amend the agenda, added that his colleagues did not want to appear unsupportive of their negotiating team, which includes Superintendent Al Bangoura.
Kevin Pranis, Local 363′s marketing manager, said park officials were negotiating like they wanted to break the strike rather than settle it. He said it was only after seven months of stalled negotiations, and a 94% vote by Local 363 membership to authorize a strike, that the park negotiating team locked onto the "poison pill" takeaways.
"What's happened now is that management has decided, after 140 years of Park Board history there's never been a strike, that the goal ... is now to make sure that for another 140 years no one will consider striking because they got hurt so badly in this strike," Pranis told commissioners. "That no other union will ever consider going on strike."
Every time commissioners attempted to move on to other business, park workers and allies from other unions formed a picket line around the board room, chanting, "No contract, no peace!" and "What's disgusting? Union busting!"
Individual workers spoke directly to commissioners, saying they had received discipline without due process and describing grievances they have pending with managers that likely have not risen to commissioners' attention.
As the demonstration dragged on without comment from the dais, commissioners ate their dinners and had whispered conversations with each other and park lawyer Brian Rice, while the union ordered dinner from Portillo's.
Commissioners finally walked out of the room around 8 p.m., three hours after the meeting began, without working through the agenda. Items not acted on included a resolution to transfer $10 million from neighborhood parks across the city to the redesign of North Commons Park, and extension of the lease for the Boys and Girls Club at Phelps Park.
Terryl Brumm, CEO of the Boys and Girls Club of the Twin Cities, left the meeting early, saying that while the club's lease of the Phelps Recreation Center now technically expires, she was confident the Park Board won't evict them.